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kuojub 's review for:
The Naturals
by Jennifer Lynn Barnes
adventurous
dark
funny
informative
mysterious
reflective
fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven:
A mix
Strong character development:
No
Loveable characters:
Yes
Diverse cast of characters:
Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus:
Complicated
This is a thrilling, dark puzzle that pulls you in, but doesn’t overstay its welcome. It's just heavy enough to make you think, but light enough to breeze through in one sitting.
This isn’t just a crime novel — it’s a masterclass in psychology. Every character is a puzzle piece, each with their own unique quirks and instincts that make them brilliantly unpredictable.
And that ending???
This is such a light book to get through (it's incredibly dark, murderous and bloody, and just overall heavy, BUT) it's such a good palette cleanser. Imagine Ur favourite psychology or criminal show. This is it. Just YA.
This is Beth before she found chess. (The Queen’s Gambit) – all brilliance, no board, just instincts.
This is Sherlock without the pipe — or the patience. (Sherlock) – all deduction, less ego (barely).
This is Bones, if Booth never showed up. (Bones) – genius in a lab, but this one’s on her own.
This is House before the bitterness set in. (House M.D.) – still brilliant, still blunt, just not yet scowling at interns.
This is Shawn if he dropped the psychic act and got serious. (Psych) – all instinct, no pineapple.
This is what happens when Reid isn’t the only prodigy in the room. (Criminal Minds) – same genius, but this one doesn’t need ten cups of coffee.
This is Morgan if someone handed her a badge before the kids and chaos. (High Potential) – brilliance unchecked, solving crimes with nothing but gut instinct and a very loud brain.
This is Cal Lightman if someone raised him on empathy instead of ego. (Lie to Me) – still reading faces like cheat codes, just with fewer grudges and slightly better manners.
This is Dean if the ghosts were in people’s heads. (Supernatural) – same gut instincts, same trust issues, but now he’s profiling killers instead of stabbing demons.
This isn’t just a crime novel — it’s a masterclass in psychology. Every character is a puzzle piece, each with their own unique quirks and instincts that make them brilliantly unpredictable.
And that ending???
This is such a light book to get through (it's incredibly dark, murderous and bloody, and just overall heavy, BUT) it's such a good palette cleanser. Imagine Ur favourite psychology or criminal show. This is it. Just YA.
This is Beth before she found chess. (The Queen’s Gambit) – all brilliance, no board, just instincts.
This is Sherlock without the pipe — or the patience. (Sherlock) – all deduction, less ego (barely).
This is Bones, if Booth never showed up. (Bones) – genius in a lab, but this one’s on her own.
This is House before the bitterness set in. (House M.D.) – still brilliant, still blunt, just not yet scowling at interns.
This is Shawn if he dropped the psychic act and got serious. (Psych) – all instinct, no pineapple.
This is what happens when Reid isn’t the only prodigy in the room. (Criminal Minds) – same genius, but this one doesn’t need ten cups of coffee.
This is Morgan if someone handed her a badge before the kids and chaos. (High Potential) – brilliance unchecked, solving crimes with nothing but gut instinct and a very loud brain.
This is Cal Lightman if someone raised him on empathy instead of ego. (Lie to Me) – still reading faces like cheat codes, just with fewer grudges and slightly better manners.
This is Dean if the ghosts were in people’s heads. (Supernatural) – same gut instincts, same trust issues, but now he’s profiling killers instead of stabbing demons.