Invisible - Reviewed
Invisible is near and dear to my heart
so I’ve been holding my breath as the reader comments come in.
You like Maeve, you really do!
I’m so happy.
As I gather up permission to post your comments on my site,
I AM able to share a public review.
Trevas at eBookGuru says
“Kimber puts you right into the minds of the main characters of this book, and as you read you’ll find yourself feeling what they feel, grieving with them, loving with them, and in general getting to know the characters very well.”
You can read the rest of the review here…
http://www.ebookguru.org/index.php/2009/02/fiction-ebook-review-invisible-by-kimber-chin/
You can also let Trevas know what category YOU think Invisible should fall into.
Is it a contemporary romance? A mystery? Suspense?












on February 12th, 2009 at 9:14 pm
Personally, when I hear the term contemporary romance I think Harlequin books. Those types of books tend to have little story line and are all about romance, and if you read more than one they all blur together.
Since your book had an excellent storyline, I wouldn’t class it anywhere near a contemporary romance novel, and I feel suspense novel with some romance thrown into the mix fits it better.
Cheers,
Trevas
on February 13th, 2009 at 2:16 am
I just finished reading Invisible. As it started out I was not sure I would like it but but soon was hardly able to put it down. Maeve was such an interesting character it was fun to read her story. I disagree with Trevas in that I feel it is contemporary romance. The suspense was not in who the bad guy was but what he would do next. The romance between Maeve and Hagen expanded and grew from the beginning though it took Hagen a while to realize it. Good book and an enjoyable read.
Keep it up Kimber. You are good.
Jeffery Carman
on February 14th, 2009 at 4:26 am
To respond to Jeffery -
I don’t actually disagree that it could be classified as a romance novel, but I find the term “contemporary romance” to be a negative one so I wanted to take away from that classification when I reviewed it.
For many people (myself included) that term brings up visions of junk Harlequin romance novels that don’t have a storyline.
Kimber’s novel was way above that classification, and the part of the book that made it such an enjoyable read for me was the suspense/mystery. So I made the review focus on that, and the writing style that made the characters in the book so realistic.
Cheers,
Trevas