Death and the arrow is a short novel that takes place in the mid-19th century. The main character, a young Tom Marlow, works at his father’s printing shop. He is living a normal teenager’s life, until his attention is caught by a string of irregular murders. The murders are only peculiar until his best friend gets involved. Tom—along with a family friend—take to the streets and get to the bottom of this mystery. When Tom finally meets the man he is looking for, he does the completely unexpected.
I did not enjoy this book very much. It was clearly written for either younger readers or, much less experienced readers. The plot has so much potential to be a bestseller, yet it hopelessly wastes great times of tension. The story also becomes too predictable after a few chapters, not to mention completely unrealistic. Near the end of the book I had lost most of my interest in the story.
“Though the narrative keeps to a frantic pace and each chapter dutifully ends with either a cliffhanger or heated emoting, tension never builds. Instead, these single-note characters seem simply to be put through their paces. Ages 12-up. (May)” –Publisher’s Weekly
I completely agree with this review. The characters never develop throughout the entire book.