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12 Reviews
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4.0 out of 5 stars
A superior character driven thriller,
By
This review is from: Learning to Fly (Hardcover)
Free Meeker, a nineteen-year-old free spirit and soon to be an unwed mother is involved in a fatal pile up on a highway blinded by a dust storm. She survives but a fellow passenger, a hitchhiker, named Lydia, is killed. Lydia was running away from an abusive relationship with her husband. After finding a gym bag filled with drug money, Free decides to assume Lydia's identity and run away to start a new life for herself and her, as yet, unborn child. Of course, life is never so simple. Looking for Lydia is her enraged husband and Don Cannon, a drug dealer who desperately needs the money that Free has found or he will, himself, be killed.April Henry has written a stand-alone novel with the subtext of "a thriller", Actually, LEARNING TO FLY should be more properly called a novel of suspense. April's novel is character driven while most true thrillers would be considered plot driven. The difference, as I see it, between the two is that the pacing would be much more rapid with the plot driven thrillers. The character driven thrillers must, by definition, move slower to allow the reader the time to get to know the character. April succeeds in creating an interesting yet sympathetic figure in Free Meeker. There are some character motivations that were not completely explained such as why a young policeman would be interested in an unwed pregnant woman. Otherwise, LEARNING TO FLY is a well-written novel that should appeal to readers on the beach or in the air. Personally, I would like to see a bit of a tighter plot but this one certainly succeeds as is.
4.0 out of 5 stars
I vividly remember this book 2 years later,
By Prangster (West Linn, Oregon USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Learning to Fly (Hardcover)
If you are a fan of Henry's cozies, this is not quite the right book for you - but it does have a happy (kinda, sorta) ending. The writing is crisp, vivid, and effective. Oregon actually experienced the kind of dust-storm disaster so horrifically described in the opening. All of the characters are a little larger than life, which is why they are so memorable, including the City of Portland. I remember this book, enjoyed it a lot and hope you do too.
2.0 out of 5 stars
Formulaic and disappointing.,
By
This review is from: Learning to Fly (Hardcover)
The comparison another reviewer makes with Mary Higgins Clark is apt. Shallow characters, predictable plot twists, and writing on the level of a high-school junior. It is incredible how the author runs out of gas for the final chapter and brings all the threads together in a couple of pages. If one didn't know better, and I don't, it would appear that the publisher told her she had only two more pages to use so she'd better finish it up. Or maybe the author was just too lazy to write a credible ending.
3.0 out of 5 stars
A WHAT IF STORY-NOT A TRUE THRILLER,
By A Customer
This review is from: Learning to Fly (Hardcover)
Learning to Fly April Henry(pg. 288 Thriller Oregon) A freak Oregon dust storm gives Free an chance of a lifetime. She is involved in a major traffic pile up that
4.0 out of 5 stars
A very good read,
By A Customer
This review is from: Learning to Fly (Hardcover)
This is the first April Henry book I've read, and I really enjoyed it. I was reminded of Mary Higgins Clark -- you are kept moving-moving-moving through this book; the author gives you what you need to know and doesn't waste time with lots of extraneous narrative. The plot is great and Henry's style is easy to read; this is a terrific plane or beach book.The main character, Free Meeker, is very likable, though I felt Henry went a little overboard in describing her parents: by the middle of the book I found myself thinking "okay, okay, they're free-spirit-go-nowhere-hippies, we GET it!" But it's effective in making Free even more sympathetic than just the opening car accident would have done. And I thought Don, the villian, was somewhat unbelievable, esp. towards the end. I just couldn't see a man in his business being anything less than completely jaded -- even given Free's "special circumstances". I found it hard to see him as the ultimate hero he became. Overall though, this is a well-written. page-turner. Definitely a good summer read.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Alopecia, Ferrets & Darlene,
By A Customer
This review is from: Learning to Fly (Hardcover)
In a brave and stunning departure from her endearing Claire Montrose series, April Henry has leapt to impressive new heights with "Learning to Fly." This quirky thriller has it all -- a guy with alopecia, a motel owner named Darlene who refers to herself in the third person, ferrets . . . .(Ferrets?!)Creepy and warm-hearted at the same time, "Learning to Fly" zigs here, then zags there, constantly departing from the expected. (No? When was the last time you rooted for an incorrigible bad guy?)Let's put it this way: "LEARNING TO FLY" IS SO RIVETING THAT I HAD TO TAKE IT WITH ME ON POTTY BREAKS!
5.0 out of 5 stars
a fast paced page turner,
By
This review is from: Learning to Fly (Hardcover)
Henry scripts a fast paced page turner filled with multi dimensional characters. I couldn't stop reading this book and I loved the protagonist, Free. She reminded me of just what it was we might have done wrong with all that political correctness a while back, raising our children to be back to the earth in the fanatical hippy fashion. I also was impressed by the way Henry smoothly created a remarkably believable bad guy in Don.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great Suspense Novel With Intriguing Heroine,
By A Customer
This review is from: Learning to Fly (Hardcover)
I loved this book. Free Meeker is an unlikely heroine, a confused young woman trying to escape a bad relationship and life. Involved in a huge multi-car pile-up on the interstate, Free assumes the identity of a woman killed in the crash. Free soon finds herself in a world of trouble, and April Henry continuously tightens the suspense and adds complications until the reader is squirming with anticipation and flying through the pages to the finish. Highly recommended.
5.0 out of 5 stars
It's Midnight. Just One More Chapter, You Promise Yourself..,
By Julia Spencer-Fleming (Portland, ME) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Learning to Fly (Hardcover)
April Henry's new thriller is one of those books you advise people not to start at bedtime. I normally arise at 4:30am to write, and I was completely useless the morning after I had read LEARNING TO FLY because the book had kept me up until 1:00am. If you've read my other reviews, you know I'm a fan of Henry's cozies. But gentle reader, this is no cozy. It's a slowly tightening knot of suspense that would have had Alfred Hitchcock bidding for the film rights. Free makes one seemingly-innocuous choice after another as the reader sees the psychopathic ex-husband (whose wife's name Free has stolen) and the regretfully homicidal drug lord (whose profits Free has stolen) circle in closer and closer--it's like the scene in Jaws, where you're shouting at the swimmer, "Get out of the water. GET OUT OF THE WATER!" Of course, the swimmer never does. Neither does Free, which is why I had to stagger around the next day on only three and a half hours of sleep.
5.0 out of 5 stars
exciting thriller,
By
This review is from: Learning to Fly (Hardcover)
Free Meeker is coming home from visiting her sister when she becomes involved in a fifty two-car chain-reaction accident. Although the nineteen-year-old woman is unharmed, her car is totaled and her passenger, a hitchhiker Lydia is dead. Free tries to help an injured man who is looking for a lost bag but when she finds it, the man is already dead.When Free opens up the bag, she finds it contains $740,000 and some drugs, which she promptly throws away. She concludes that she is holding drug money and there is no way to trace it to her. She takes it intending to start a new life for herself using Lydia's identification. She isn't aware that Lydia's husband is an abuser who will do anything to track her down or that the owner of the money will kill to get it back. While these two men are tracking down "Lydia" Free lives a peaceful and secure life in Portland, never dreaming that she is in any danger. LEARNING TO FLY is an exciting thriller that will keep readers enthralled because the action never stops happening. April Henry manages to sustain a high level of tension throughout the book without any real violence so cozy fans will appreciate this unusually refreshing story. Harriet Klausner |
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Learning to Fly by April Henry (Hardcover - May 7 2002)
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