Official Review: A Man is A Disaster by Mitchell Karbin
Posted: 07 Apr 2015, 19:00
[Following is the official OnlineBookClub.org review of A Man is a Disaster, Air Conditioning is Divine by Mitchell Karbin]
A Man is a Disaster, Air Conditioning is Divine by Mitchell Karbin is an erotic thriller. Cleva Winters engages in an affair with a man, who turns out to be an escaped mental patient. He is extremely disturbed, and he believes himself to be an omnipotent being. He is known as Purevil. After she ends the affair, he vows revenge, and he takes something very dear from her. The police cannot help, but private detective Sam Angel can. He is the only hope of recovering what the mad “being” has taken. It is a race against time, but as he discovers more and more about the case, he realizes that no one has told the absolute truth, and no one is who he or she truly claims to be.
The plot is meant to slowly reveal the answer to a mystery, but the answer to the mystery is painfully obvious from almost the start of the novel. The events and dialogue are meant to slowly push forward answers, but I knew the answers from the start. I guessed the identity of Purevil within the first couple of chapters. Honestly, I felt cheated. The big reveal at the end is not a big reveal at all. The narrative switches between multiple characters, which is usually a good idea, but in this book, it is not. It just causes the plot to slow way down. The idea of a character believing he is an omnipotent being is a fairly unique one, but the plot does not deliver, and it does not do the unique idea any justice.
The characters are all very dull and most are really unlikable. Purevil is the most intriguing of the bunch. His lines of thinking and actions are just strange and deranged enough to be interesting. However, he is set up as someone to be feared by everyone. Cleva and Purevil’s own therapist are deeply afraid of him, but he really does not do anything really frightening. He believes himself to be way more than he is, and his narcissism gets really annoying after the first few chapters. His character becomes quite boring because of all his talk and no real action. Cleva is one dimensional. She does not progress or change. She is extremely selfish, and she does not have a single quality I could connect with her on. The final character I will touch upon is Sam Angel. He is a private detective, but he is a slow one. I was and any reader will be steps ahead of him at all times. Also, his character is rude and even borders on abusive. At one point, he smacks a female character on the head, and he tells her it is for “wasting so much of my time.”
While reading this novel, I felt really frustrated. There is a major plot hole, which really bothers me. Purevil has been in Chloe’s life for years, but somehow no one recognizes him when he is with her? I am sorry, but there is no way that is even possible.
I give A Man is a Disaster, Air Conditioning is Divine 1 out of 4 stars. I cannot say I would recommend this book to anyone. The book is boring, and the characters are dull. The plot drags on far too long, and the major plot hole ruins the whole book. I cannot give it more than 1 star.
A Man is a Disaster, Air Conditioning is Divine by Mitchell Karbin is an erotic thriller. Cleva Winters engages in an affair with a man, who turns out to be an escaped mental patient. He is extremely disturbed, and he believes himself to be an omnipotent being. He is known as Purevil. After she ends the affair, he vows revenge, and he takes something very dear from her. The police cannot help, but private detective Sam Angel can. He is the only hope of recovering what the mad “being” has taken. It is a race against time, but as he discovers more and more about the case, he realizes that no one has told the absolute truth, and no one is who he or she truly claims to be.
The plot is meant to slowly reveal the answer to a mystery, but the answer to the mystery is painfully obvious from almost the start of the novel. The events and dialogue are meant to slowly push forward answers, but I knew the answers from the start. I guessed the identity of Purevil within the first couple of chapters. Honestly, I felt cheated. The big reveal at the end is not a big reveal at all. The narrative switches between multiple characters, which is usually a good idea, but in this book, it is not. It just causes the plot to slow way down. The idea of a character believing he is an omnipotent being is a fairly unique one, but the plot does not deliver, and it does not do the unique idea any justice.
The characters are all very dull and most are really unlikable. Purevil is the most intriguing of the bunch. His lines of thinking and actions are just strange and deranged enough to be interesting. However, he is set up as someone to be feared by everyone. Cleva and Purevil’s own therapist are deeply afraid of him, but he really does not do anything really frightening. He believes himself to be way more than he is, and his narcissism gets really annoying after the first few chapters. His character becomes quite boring because of all his talk and no real action. Cleva is one dimensional. She does not progress or change. She is extremely selfish, and she does not have a single quality I could connect with her on. The final character I will touch upon is Sam Angel. He is a private detective, but he is a slow one. I was and any reader will be steps ahead of him at all times. Also, his character is rude and even borders on abusive. At one point, he smacks a female character on the head, and he tells her it is for “wasting so much of my time.”
While reading this novel, I felt really frustrated. There is a major plot hole, which really bothers me. Purevil has been in Chloe’s life for years, but somehow no one recognizes him when he is with her? I am sorry, but there is no way that is even possible.
I give A Man is a Disaster, Air Conditioning is Divine 1 out of 4 stars. I cannot say I would recommend this book to anyone. The book is boring, and the characters are dull. The plot drags on far too long, and the major plot hole ruins the whole book. I cannot give it more than 1 star.