3.86 out of 5 Stars
~ Thank you to The Parliament House and NetGalley for providing me with an e-ARC in exchange for an honest review. ~No Spoilers :)
***Lets out a long, low whistle.***
So, first things first, holey moley I got some really great creepy vibes out of this book. In terms of genre, I think it may be a little confused. It's most clearly a mystery, but there are paranormal undertones that are roped in and out of the story a bit inconsistently for me to decisively say that this book is also a paranormal. A part of me also wants to call it a horror story, but that could just be me getting easily creeped out. The atmosphere was great though. It was excellently creepy and cold and added to the paranoia around the city.
The Redpoint Crux was a surprising twist in my reading schedule. I didn't realize it was going to be as dark as it ended up being, but creepiness aside, the way Shamy describes the theater and the ballet was beautiful. I seriously want to see a live performance of Giselle now. I don't know that I would ever pick it up in a bookstore for myself, but I could definitely see myself recommending this to some friends that are more into creepy/mystery/horror(?) genres.
I'm not sure I completely enjoyed the character development. There were times when I thought the relationships could have been drawn out a bit more, or even have more scenes between the characters to draw out the connections and the plot more. I also don't buy that Liam, a 19-year-old, would be running a theater. I could be very wrong about that and maybe that sort of situation could happen in reality. But, I just had to swallow it in this book and it didn't go down easily. I do however, know that I liked the banter between Meg and Bellamy. I'm not sure if it was an entirely good relationship, but they definitely had strong chemistry on the page.
The biggest issue I took the book was that, and I'm about 85% sure about this, there's a massive plot-hole. I don't want to spoil the book so I won't say what it is, but I finished the book and was like, "But. . . what about. . ." It wasn't super frustrating because I really liked the ending as a whole, but it still is just dangling in my mind unresolved.
I loved the mystery. I had a lot of fun trying to figure out the murderer with way the characters were laid out and introduced. I also really loved how ballet was described in the book. I have never done ballet; I have never studied ballet; I don't know anyone in ballet. There's something so potent though about a niche or fine art like that being described by someone who lived it.
Thanks for reading!