2-3-4 Challenge Book Discussions #2 discussion

Speak No Evil (No Evil Trilogy, #1)
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Speak No Evil > Question B

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message 1: by Jonetta (last edited May 20, 2019 02:32AM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Jonetta (ejaygirl) | 9285 comments Mod
Steven Thomas quickly rises to the top of the investigative team’s suspect list. Was it plausible for him to not understand that his lies would be discovered? Were you suspicious of him?


Karen ♐ (kmk1214) | 909 comments I was never suspicious of him. It just seemed too easy to suspect him. I think Steven by who he was dating and continuing to stay in school at his age, was trying to stay young. Just the way he lied to his brother who was there to help him showed how immature he was.


Jonetta (ejaygirl) | 9285 comments Mod
At first I was biting but then I stepped back, thinking just that...it was too easy. He was just behaving stupidly.


Lauren (laurenjberman) | 1808 comments He was definitely strange - a grown man acting and thinking like a young college student, but I never suspected him. His life experience just didn't mesh with the chapters from the killer's POV.


Jonetta (ejaygirl) | 9285 comments Mod
That was it, too, Lauren. He didn’t fit that voice.


Lauren (laurenjberman) | 1808 comments Jonetta wrote: "That was it, too, Lauren. He didn’t fit that voice."

Yes, I just could not reconcile a man who risked his life to save people in wartime, torturing young women. He didn't appear to have the misogynistic bent that the killer was depicted as having.


Jonetta (ejaygirl) | 9285 comments Mod
Perfectly stated, Lauren!


Melissa (melissasd) | 676 comments Lauren wrote: "Jonetta wrote: "That was it, too, Lauren. He didn’t fit that voice."

Yes, I just could not reconcile a man who risked his life to save people in wartime, torturing young women. He didn't appear to..."


I agree, Lauren. I was never suspicious of him, but it was obvious that he was hiding something. He so badly wanted to help, but did not do it in the correct manner.


Sandra Hoover (sandrahoover) | 397 comments Mod
I never once looked at Steve Thomas as the killer. One big reason is that it was way too easy for him to be. The story would virtually be over before it really got started. And as we got into the killers head, it just didn't feel or sound like him to me.
I guess he was a little naïve in thinking he'd get away with not being truthful to the police - but it spoke of his immaturity and also, for me, that there was something broken in him - but not in the way of a murderer. I just saw him as an aging man chasing his youth.


Jonetta (ejaygirl) | 9285 comments Mod
Steve was just sad. But, as you say, he just didn’t “fit” what we were getting from the killer’s point of view.


Charlene (charlenethestickler) | 1203 comments Ditto, Sandra. This would have been a very short short story!


Lauren (laurenjberman) | 1808 comments Jonetta wrote: "for me, that there was something broken in him - but not in the way of a murderer. I just saw him as an aging man chasing his youth. "

Agreed. This is the picture that I got of him as well. It was clear to me that he was suffering from a form of PTSD. I think he had had enough of killing in the war and wanted to return to a more "innocent" time of youth.


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