Three Remain is a post-apocalyptic sci-fi thriller and tells
the story of three strangers thrown together who have to learn to work as one
in order to remain alive.
First, we meet Glen, who works in insurance and has witnessed
a strange meteor shower just before he has gone to sleep. Then we have Sunshine
(so named by Glen obviously due to her sunny personality—or not) who has awoken
after a car accident with no memory and no clue as to her identity. Lastly, we
have Traci, a pre-teen out at the movies who has woken to find everyone is
missing and there is no signal for her phone (horror of horrors). The three
land up meeting each other and realise they are trapped in an area surrounded
by a fogbank. With no power and no means of communication with anyone else,
they are forced into strange circumstances and have to make decisions they
might never have even contemplated before. Could it really be the end of the
world or are they pawns in a larger game?
I was drawn to the book by the description and the start
really pulled me in. Then things went south. This is one book I actually
struggled to finish. The idea behind the beginning of the book—great. The idea
about the multitude of plot changes—getting fishy. The ending—oh, come on! You would
get to a section where the characters were pushed a ‘la “Truman show style” and
sort of buy into it, and then they would be pushed somewhere else and then
somewhere else. Each time I kept asking myself—surely not? There is fiction and
imagination and then there is just plain silly. It’s almost an insult to ask
the reader to swallow some of it. From tanks to androids and dolphins to sex
robots to aliens – it’s like someone looked at some interesting ideas and said hey, why not use all of them in one book?
There were initially only three characters to concentrate on
so you would think that a lot could be said about them and you could really get
into their stories. I didn’t find this at all. Sunshine was the most annoying
and whiny character and I honestly felt more irritated than sorry for her. While
Glen was trying to be the perfect gentleman around her she harped on and on
about him not looking while she was changing or telling him he was too old for
her and never stood a chance or just being flat out rude to him. Traci was not
much better and her moaning about her phone not working got on my nerves. Her
attitude and actions jumped constantly from a pre-teen to one much older and
the inconsistency was jarring. The supposed “mother and daughter” dynamic between
Sunshine and Traci that was meant to be a big part of the story fell flat to
me, and I found some of the interactions between the three unnerving.
It’s sad when a book makes such a negative impact on a
reader and the silly dialogue and ludicrous situations overshadowed any
positives. I’m sure if it had been developed correctly it might have been a
good story, but all I remember are the negative parts. The one thing I can say,
though, is that barring a few punctuation errors, the proofing was very good.
Unfortunately, this is one I wouldn’t read again. Thank you
to Netgalley for the opportunity to review the book.
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