Reviews

Disappearing Nightly by Laura Resnick

ddmckenna's review

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4.0

This was a fun audiobook, reminded me a bit of the Stephanie Plum books by Janet Evanovich. Some heavy themes in the book too though, mixed in and sometimes intermingled with the humor. I’m a little torn on the whole dramatization thing. I do like that the characters have their own voices, but sometimes I feel like the sound effects were a little overdone to the point they were distracting, and often exceedingly corny. And during the climax scene(s) as well as leading up to it the narrator started reading faster and the sound effects were a constant stream; I don’t think all that was really necessary in order to convey the urgency that the characters were feeling; it was conveyed in the text.

hgranger's review against another edition

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1.0

This book is awful. Plot could have been good, but it all drowns in inane dialogue and ridiculous actions. Blech!

peacefulbookwyrm's review against another edition

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adventurous funny lighthearted mysterious medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.0

aknas22's review against another edition

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4.0

This was a fun, fast paced read with characters I really liked. I'll definitely read the next book in the series.

litwrite's review against another edition

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3.0

This is a fun little urban fantasy book, the start of a series about an aspiring actress named Esther Diamond who lives in New York City and ends up pulled into some otherworldly intrigue, and making friends with a 350 year old Dr. Zadok who happens to have drank a potion for immortality and is stationed in New York in a quest to defend the world from evil.

This first novel tracks the mystery of people who actually fully disappear when they are part of magical acts were they are supposed to be put in a box, disappear, then reappear again.

I loved the tongue in cheek tone the book took, dialogue was cute but borderlined on almost too cutesy at some point - I think Resnick needs to tone it down a little. Very Buffy-esque dialogue and characters, Buffy fans would definitely be more into this, it has the same sense of humor.

I like the fact that Esther has absolutely no special abilities or powers, it's refreshing in a genre filled with Very Unique Snowflakes. Worth a look-see for fans of the urban fantasy genre who want something with a little more humor.

attytheresa's review

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3.0

Esther, the understudy for the magician's assistant, is also a scantily clad nymph in the chorus in Sorcerer!, an off-Broadway production revolving around a magician's act. A mediocre D-List magician's act at that. The highlight of the show is the Disappearing Act, you know, the trick where the beautiful magician's assistant 'disappears'. Except tonight she really disappears. Poof!

What follows is a romp, a silly, highly entertaining, mystery romp involving various D-list magician acts whose beautiful assistants have suddenly really disappeared during the act, including Dolly the Dancing Cowgirl, the nearly naked Samson (different acts but equally outrageous), Alice the white Siberian tiger and oh, yes, the beautiful female assistant in that act. Enter Dr. Zadok and a motley but highly original crew that together with Esther ultimately finds the evil villain, counters his evil magic, and rescues all. Oh, and let's not forget the oh so attractive Connor Lopez, Detective, NYPD, who is skeptical at best but together with Esther gives us one of the funniest 'having coffee together' scenes I've read in a long time.

Yes, I really enjoyed this romp even though it took me days to read - that had more to do with work and pandemic exhaustion than the book. I knew who the evil villain was and why he was causing magician assistants -- beautiful magician assistants -- to disappear practically from the beginning, but it really didn't matter because you were reading this for the characters and settings.

madz2023's review against another edition

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5.0

Loved!! Just finished this book while in Tanzania, Africa!!! Its a very funny read and I love Esther the main character!! She and Lopez together are the BEST couple!!!! There is soooo much humor to the story with Esther who's fluent in sarcasm, Lopez and his stories and assumptions, and Max... well he's a mage.. who happens to be 350 years old! The thing is: he hasn't totally caught up with the modern time and is therefore freaked out of any form of modern, motorized transportation. Max has also blown up his computer.. but so far the home phone has made it! Anyway, I totally give this book a 4-1/2 outa 5 stars!! There were only a slight few issues to be had, but overall its a great start to a series!!! :) <3 LOPEZ!

grayreader's review against another edition

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2.0

Bit of dark humor at the end that did not work for me, seemed in poor taste, which lowered this book by a star for me. However, this series as a whole is very enjoyable.

dlmoldovan's review against another edition

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4.0

i picked up this book to read on a road trip, and it definetely provided a few hours of entartainment while riding in the back seat of a car (while you are trying to distract yourself from the fact that you have car sickness). the story line is easy to follow, the characters are hilarious, and i couldn't wait to get to the end. i think it might be the first one in the series, and it is definetely a good start.

greeneyedreads's review

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funny lighthearted mysterious medium-paced