Burn Notice The Fix - Obsidian Author:Tod Goldberg Covert spy Michael Westen has found himself in forced seclusion in Miami?and a little paranoid. Watched by the FBI, cut off from intelligence contacts, and with his assets frozen, Weston is on ice with a warning: stay there or get ?disappeared.? Driven to find out who burned him and why, he?s biding his time helping people with nowhere else to t... more »urn. People like socialite Cricket O?Connor whose own husband has vanished, along with her fortune...« less
Philip L. reviewed Burn Notice: The Fix (Obsidian) on
2 member(s) found this review helpful.
As a fan of the show, I was really looking forward to getting another story with these great characters in this great setting. The book ends up being very hot or miss when it comes to that.
Goldberg does a good job at first of hitting the beats of the show when it comes to dialogue, pace, and character relationships; but he loses this in different places along the way. Part of this is the internal dialogue of Michael Westin, which we already get in the show, but in the novel is really expounded on, to the detriment of the book. It's almost as if the reason to read the book is to get more insight on the characters and their motivations, but this is what is most distracting.
The attempts at fleshing Westin out, and making him seem more sentimental about his youth in Miami fell flat to me. It did more to distract from the action and plot than add to what was going on.
As far as the plot, for me it again just missed the mark. It starts off with a very good noir premise, but as it comes toward the climax, it becomes very convoluted and difficult to follow what happened and why; especially when it comes to the subplot that the book starts off with.
All this said, the book wasn't horrible, but just not as good as it could have been,which is a shame. This may just be a case of a property not translating as well from it's original medium.
Erin D. (darcerin) reviewed Burn Notice: The Fix (Obsidian) on
This was a great side story to a fun show. I really enjoyed this book! Some of the swearing was probably unnecessary - I don't see Mike Weston doing it *quite* so much, but hey, it's still a great read.
For the most part, this book captures the spirit of the TV show. I don't think that the author got Michael's and Barry's characters quite right (Barry wasn't quite sleazy enough, and Michael doesn't swear nearly as much on TV as he does here), but he had Fiona down pat. There were several points in the book (one of which was a conversation between Fiona and Madeline about aliens!) where I burst out laughing. If you're a fan of the show, it's well worth it to pick this up.
(A piece of trivia: the author, Tod Goldberg, is the brother of Lee Goldberg, who writes the Monk tie-ins and used to write the Diagnosis: Murder books.)