Ratings12
Average rating3.4
Not as suspenseful or thrilling as her other two. Actually my least favorite of all her books. I was totally not surprised when Nadine figures out that Spoiler she was sexually abused as a child by cult leader Aaron Quinn. Who is supposed to be creepy, but seemed like a cookie cutter cult leader who is supposed to be charismatic, but of course the main character had his number and felt very uncomfortable around him at a young age even before the sexual abuse started. While this isn't a bad suspense novel I just wasn't satisfied as I have been with Chevy Stevens other novels.
I was incredibly disappointed with Always Watching. After Still Missing I went to Never Knowing and that was a disappointment. But Always Watching was even worse than Never Knowing (which I didn't hate, but I really didn't care for Sara).
Nadine was the worst character in a book with terrible characters. I felt no sympathy for anyone except for maybe Willow and Heather who are fleeting in this novel. I couldn't relate to anyone and I don't think even Chevy Stevens did. The writing felt stifled and amateur, nothing like Still Missing. It's very sad.
I still have That Night sitting on my bookshelf. I'm keeping my fingers crossed...
I read Chevy Steven's third novel quickly. I have to say it wasn't my favorite book by her. I think it suffered because there were SO many plot lines to follow. But I will say. I really wanted to see how it was going to end and for the most part, I enjoyed it.