*Actual rating 2.5 stars*
I haven't found a romantic suspense novel I've truly enjoyed since the late 1980s, when I binge-read Mary Higgins Clark, and it's hard to say exactly why I can't warm up to this genre. I love romance and I love thrillers and psychological suspense, but for some reason when the two get mixed together, it's usually an awkward reading experience for me. As much as I would love to say that Midnight Exposure is the book that bucked the trend, sadly, that would not be true. However, I can state that it was mildly entertaining despite some of the cringe-worthy moments it gave me.
On the plus side, it is a novel about people being stalked and killed by a homicidal Druid in the Maine woods. Maybe I'm morbid, but that's a fun idea for a thriller. Also, the hero and heroine were both relatively likable...at least likable enough I didn't want them to die. And it was a quick, mindless sort of read, which I am often in the mood for these days.
But as to what I didn't like...the simile and metaphor-laden writing and the abundance of cliches. WARNING: mild spoilers to follow. (But I don't give away anything important, like the bad guy's identity. Although if you've read very many suspense novels, you will probably figure that out right away.)
To start with, the heroine, Jayne, is working as a tabloid photographer despite her scruples because she has to pay for her little brother's medical bills. (If I had a dollar for every character in a contemporary romance novel who struggles to pay off a relative's medical bills, I'd have enough money to pay for someone else's medical bills, or at least a doctor visit. It's like the easy shorthand to have a character do something weird or problematic for money and still be portrayed as good and noble.)
And Jayne has such a tragic history--orphaned at twelve, gave up her carefree youth to cook and clean for her brothers, attacked and almost killed by a stalker in college (so she has to drop out). Then it turns out that the hero, Reed, also has a tragic backstory! Honestly, why can't anyone in this type of novel just be normal? Why always so wounded and tragic?
Another cliche--of course, the police are completely incompetent. Prior to Jayne's arrival, two hikers disappeared in the area and then one of them's decapitated body is found. And the police are like, "Well, let's not go crazy folks, we don't know it was murder. This young man could very well have been decapitated by natural causes."
But as I said, despite a lot of silliness, it was an okay story. I doubt I will read more by this author, but I'm not wishing I could invent a time machine just to get back the hours of my life it took to read it.
Read for Unapologetic Romance Readers 2018 challenge: Romantic Suspense category