The Secret Hour

electronic resource

English language

Published Jan. 16, 2009 by HarperCollins.

ISBN:
978-0-06-195451-1
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3 stars (11 reviews)

A few nights after Jessica Day arrives in Bixby, Oklahoma, she wakes up at midnight to find the entire world frozen, except for her and a few others who call themselves 'midnighters'. Dark things haunt this midnight hour – dark things with a mysterious interest in Jessica. The question is why;The Secret Hour is a compelling tale of dark secrets, midnight romance, eerie creatures, courage, destiny, and unexpected peril.

3 editions

Review of 'Midnighters #1' on 'Storygraph'

2 stars

THE SECRET HOUR is a tightly wound story about teens who can access the 25th hour of the day and must fend off the monsters which live there. The plot is engaging, the characters are a complicated mix of likable and morally grey, and the narration perfectly captures the tone and language of teens in the early 2000’s. Unfortunately for my enjoyment of it, the slang in that decade was very ableist, and that language is woven throughout the text at a level too frequent to be an accident, and too frustrating for me to even consider recommending it now.

The perspective switches between the characters who can see the secret hour, but Jessica Day is definitely the main character. Her arrival is what sets off the plot and escalates the creatures’ plans. I like how well thought-out the web of relationships is. The feeling of their interactions fits the …

Review of 'The Secret Hour' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

This book isn't terrible or anything, but the biggest problem is it's so milquetoast holy crap.

The premise is interesting -- people born at midnight are able to access an extra hour of every day where they have special powers and ancient creepy crawly evils lurk -- but the characters so uniformly unexceptional and the plot is so weak that you just sort of muddle through waiting and waiting for it to get interesting. Spoiler alert: it never really does.

Of the main characters the only one I didn't find painfully uninteresting was Dess, and even her characterization was pretty trite. Everyone else, despite attempts to make various characters seem ~edgy~, was unbearably bland.

The plot, such as it is, is all build-up with a not especially exciting climax since said climax is itself just build-up for something else. I suppose the intention is to get you to read the …

Review of 'Midnighters #1' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Fairly entertaining, too short and shallow.

I'm afraid it doesn't hold up to Westerfeld's Uglies. It felt like the novel equivalent of a TV episode rather than a movie. It's fairly entertaining, but I wish he had taken more time with the characters. It really is just a plot rendition with no development.

It was good enough that I'll finish out the series in the hopes that more of the back story is revealed and not just more action scene constructs.

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rated it

4 stars
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rated it

5 stars
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3 stars
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3 stars
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4 stars
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rated it

3 stars