Strange Buildings

Paperback, 384 pages

Published by Harper Collins.

ISBN:
978-0-06-351780-6
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reviewed Strange Buildings by Jim Rion (Strange Houses, #2)

unimpressed

this book is an exercise in suspending one’s disbelief. the whole book is just the author and his acquaintances speculating and running wild with theories they came up on their own with zero proof most of the time. it’s very much all tell and not show.

i wasn’t all that impressed by the author’s previous books either but he (or his fictionalised self) is particularly dislikable in this one. he approaches the survivors for interviews while lying about his intentions just to satiate his curiosity, often without any consideration for the victims. in a way he’s also profiting off of their traumas, since he published a book about all these cases.

Interesting,Dark Puzzles. But is there too much explanation?

No rating

This is my first time reading one of these books (Strange Houses and Strange Pictures are lauded by most), so I'd be interested to know what fans of the series think. I like the conceit (floor plans with strange details that end up being linked to dark story lines), but the last quarter of the book is a detailed reveal of a large, overarching story. That last section started to feel a little tedious. Still, it was a fun read, and I'd consider reading the other two books.