Fotografía de autor

Donald E. McQuinn

Autor de Warrior

19 Obras 605 Miembros 3 Reseñas 3 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Incluye los nombres: D. McQuinn, Don McQuinn, Donald McQuinn

Series

Obras de Donald E. McQuinn

Warrior (1990) 194 copias
Wanderer (1993) 89 copias
With Full Honors (1996) 83 copias
Witch (1994) 70 copias
The Prisoner Within (1997) 36 copias
Light the Hidden Things (2012) 33 copias
Targets (1980) 30 copias
Escape to Challenge (1998) 15 copias
Wake in Darkness (1981) 15 copias
Shadow of Lies (1985) 8 copias
Who Dares Define Victory (1999) 7 copias
Warrior's Gamble (1999) 6 copias
Poison (2000) 4 copias
The Path of Confusion (1999) 3 copias
Renewal (2001) 3 copias
The Path of Mistakes (1999) 3 copias
Malice (2000) 3 copias
The Path of Discovery (2000) 2 copias
First Love, First Lie (2012) 1 copia

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1930
Género
male
Organizaciones
US Marine Corps

Miembros

Reseñas

Yeah, no - not for me. I read three chapters, in which nothing happened except conversations in which I frequently couldn't figure out which of two characters were speaking. And lots of references to doing, or not doing, things, or having no choice but to do/not do things - all for honor, which seems to mean tradition. Or something. I quit.
½
 
Denunciada
jjmcgaffey | Dec 15, 2017 |
While this book is not completely bad, it is absolutely nothing like what I expected. In fact, in these terms it was actually pretty disappointing, but maybe it was the fact that I knew what I wanted to read that ended up making this book seem rather dull. As it happens, the book does not focus on the recovery process of a soldier who has been psychologically wounded by war. In fact, the book, doesn't even focus on a single character. And while I'm not opposite to several characters in a romance, the fact that most of the are not exactly relevant for the story makes it seem very slow-paced and, in some moments, even boring. Characters that had the potential to be relevant to the story end up as some sort of background/supportive characters, specially Vanderkirk, who only seemed to be in the book because it needed a contemporaneous villain to serve as an obstacle for the main couple (as if they didn't have enough problems to face).

The main character, Crow Carter, had everything to be an interesting one and ended up being under-developed. He had PTSD, but sometimes you forget this because his romantic interest, Lila, drowns his story with her seemingly irrelevant problems. Okay, maybe "irrelevant" is too strong to define her problems, but comparing her dreams of building a memorial for her deceased relatives just for the sake of the whole things doesn't really seem to be more important than a guy who has served in the army and is haunted by the memories he gathered in combat.

I'm not the biggest fan of how Lila was developed. I'm not into stereotypes of fragile, obstinate girls who are actually able to solve every single problem using the power of love. Wait, did I say obstinate? For most part of the book, she doesn't really know what she wants to do with her life. She hesitates and her resolve wavers at every single difficulty she finds and has several mood shifts, which becomes annoying after a while.

This book is not horrid. In spite of the usual grammar errors that seem to be a constant problem for Kindle eBooks, it is actually deep and poetic in a way. But a sappy romance with lots of angst and a silly ending is definitely not what I wanted to read.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
aryadeschain | Aug 26, 2014 |
Will be reading the just-bought kindle $0.99 edition labeled "Warrior Book 1"
 
Denunciada
Spurts | Oct 29, 2015 |

Premios

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Estadísticas

Obras
19
Miembros
605
Popularidad
#41,547
Valoración
3.2
Reseñas
3
ISBNs
36
Idiomas
1
Favorito
3

Tablas y Gráficos