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Relentless
Relentless

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Author: Simon Kernick
Publisher: Corgi Books
Category: Book

List Price: £6.99
Buy Used: £0.01
You Save: £6.98 (100%)



New (30) from £0.75

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 136 reviews
Sales Rank: 1262

Media: Mass Market Paperback
Edition: New Ed
Pages: 464
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6
Dimensions (in): 6.9 x 3.9 x 1.5

ISBN: 0552153125
EAN: 9780552153126
ASIN: 0552153125

Publication Date: May 21, 2007
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Relentless
  • Audio CD - Relentless (Unabridged Audio book): Unabridged
  • Hardcover - Relentless
  • Paperback - Relentless

Similar Items:

  • The House at Riverton
  • The Savage Garden
  • The Memory Keeper's Daughter
  • The Other Side of the Bridge
  • Severed

Customer Reviews:   Read 131 more reviews...

2 out of 5 stars lacks substance   November 6, 2008
In the hands of another author (Ian Rankin sprang to mind) this decent idea could, with a bit more development, been made into a good book. In the hands of Kernick however it's an opportunity wasted.

The problems are many, firstly the characters - the main protagonist (Tom) lost all sympathy by his illogical, unbelievable and rather strange actions throughout the book (why not call the police after the first phone call? why run from the police station? why lie to anyone who tries to help?) personally I couldnt help but feel he deserved what happened to him, he certainly could have done more to help himself.

It's virtually impossible to have sympathy with his wife (young kids, recently married yet lies to her husband, has affairs with her husbands best man and her own lesbian colleague, gets people killed with her irresponsible behaviour) - and Tom wants her back?!?

The main villain (Lench....wasn't he one of the Bash Street Kids?) is a real missed opportunity - hired killer, Bosnian war veteran wanted for war crimes - he has the potential to be a genuinely terrifying bad guy - but is left sadly under developed (any why is his background only revealed at the end of the book, when he's dead? it would have been better to develop Lench with this info throughout the book - it would have added some (much needed) extra tension.

There is also a hugely underdeveloped back plot (they super rich business man who has hired Lench) which could have added a lot to the book but this is only mentioned a few times and there is no effort to develop it or bring it into the main story.

As for the end of the book, it left me strangely flat and uninterested, it's almost like the author has lost interest. The final fight scene is amateurish and almost completely without tension or surprise and the 'surprise' ending just left me feeling 'so what?'

The story could have been good but I couldn't help feeling that Kernick approached it from the wrong angle and left it underdeveloped - maybe he wasnt confident enough to beef out the story?

I think it would have been far better if the Bosnian angle and the super rich business man story lines had been more to the fore and the 'one man wronged' angle had been pushed slightly back.

Kernicks writing style doesnt endear either, it's rather basic and uninvolving - having said that this is an easy read and It did pass the time on a couple of days bus journeys to work, hence the 2 stars.

I will not be digging out any more books by the author however.



3 out of 5 stars Good book, apart from the poor ending   October 30, 2008
This book has its faults but is a gripping read throughout. The title "relentless" sums up the pace of the book - there are no lulls or pages of waffle to get the page-count up that spoil so many books these days. The pace means that the holes in the plot go largely unnoticed; it's only on reading some of the negative reviews on here that I have spotted them, so your enjoyment probably depends largely on whether you get caught up in the story early on.

The let-down for me was the ending. The whole premise of this book, and its big mystery, as described on the back cover, is that the central character receives a phone call from an old friend who is apparently being tortured, which sets of the whole string of events that make up the story. We never find out why that call was made and why his friend implicated the central character in his problems. Quite frustrating when a book doesn't solve its biggest mystery at the end.

I also notice that one of Simon Kernick's earlier books - The Crime Trade - centres on two characters who feature in Relentless. It just makes me wonder if Relentless is the sequel to that book, and if it is better to read Crime Trade first. This is not obvious from the publisher's notes on these books.



2 out of 5 stars Lacks substance   October 29, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

In the hands of another author (Ian Rankin sprang to mind) this decent idea could, with a bit more development, been made into a good book. In the hands of Kernick however it's an opportunity wasted.

The problems are many, firstly the characters - the main protagonist (Tom) lost all sympathy by his illogical, unbelievable and rather strange actions throughout the book (why not call the police after the first phone call? why run from the police station? why lie to anyone who tries to help?) personally I couldnt help but feel he deserved what happened to him, he certainly could have done more to help himself.

It's virtually impossible to have sympathy with his wife (young kids, recently married yet lies to her husband, has affairs with her husbands best man and her own lesbian colleague, gets people killed with her irresponsible behaviour) - and Tom wants her back?!?

The main villain (Lench....wasn't he one of the Bash Street Kids?) is a real missed opportunity - hired killer, Bosnian war veteran wanted for war crimes - he has the potential to be a genuinely terrifying bad guy - but is left sadly under developed (any why is his background only revealed at the end of the book, when he's dead? it would have been better to develop Lench with this info throughout the book - it would have added some (much needed) extra tension.

There is also a hugely underdeveloped back plot (they super rich business man who has hired Lench) which could have added a lot to the book but this is only mentioned a few times and there is no effort to develop it or bring it into the main story.

As for the end of the book, it left me strangely flat and uninterested, it's almost like the author has lost interest. The final fight scene is amateurish and almost completely without tension or surprise and the 'surprise' ending just left me feeling 'so what?'

The story could have been good but I couldn't help feeling that Kernick approached it from the wrong angle and left it underdeveloped - maybe he wasnt confident enough to beef out the story?

I think it would have been far better if the Bosnian angle and the super rich business man story lines had been more to the fore and the 'one man wronged' angle had been pushed slightly back.

Kernicks writing style doesnt endear either, it's rather basic and uninvolving - having said that this is an easy read and It did pass the time on a couple of days bus journeys to work, hence the 2 stars.

I will not be digging out any more books by the author however.



5 out of 5 stars Excellent book - a tense thriller   October 14, 2008
I thought this book was superb - BUT I was looking for something which was easy to read and kept my attention.

If you are looking for something with character development, intellectual prose and depth, this is not the book for you ... but then it is obvious from the cover what you should expect.

I was completely drawn into the situation in the book, did not want to put it down and went on to read 4 other of Simon's books. This is the best of them so far - and the others are great too! There are plenty of surprises all the way through the book - it keeps you hooked.

One of the best page-turners around!



5 out of 5 stars relentless   August 10, 2008
Absolute page turner. I am at that age when I want to be entertained and although there are a few bits that maybe one could knock a hole in it is a fast thrilling read. I didn't have time to be critical - the book lifts you up and sprints to the end. There are very few books that can do that and I would thoroughly recommend it to anyone - especially those who don't like reading much. I defy anyone not to be caught up in the excitement. I read til I finished it at 5am and still couldn't sleep because my heart rate was through the roof!



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