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The subways of Manhattan are only the first stage of Jake Richmond's descent into the vast subterranean passageways beneath the city - and the discovery of a mystery and a terror greater than any human being could imagine. Naomi went into the tunnels to destroy herself ... but found an even more terrible fate awaiting her in the twisting corridors.

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Wova4 Both books explore the subterranean world beneath New York and have horror elements.

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3 reviews
I’m usually a devoted follower of Clegg, and have been itching to read Naomi since I learned of its birth. It wasn’t the beautiful, wrapped up, pretty bundle I dreamed of though ­ instead it was rather confusing, mislead, a bit jumbled, and tainted with weakness in a few spots.

For redeeming qualities, the story held a few. The idea was unique enough, and it’s always fun to read about ancient witches and all that entailed in the ‘older days’. Some of the characters, particularly Maddie, were rewarding to read through, and since it was hard to figure out much of the time which canal the story would end up passing through, I was kept on my toes a bit to see what would pop up next.

What earned lower points on the scale was that show more the beginning was a bit confusing and hopped around a bit, many of the underground scenes were just too muddled to follow, making it harder to keep my interest at high peaks, and some of the scenes were so bizarre they induced mild headaches.

Jake seemed like a decent guy never getting the good side of things. The ending of the novel didn’t serve him justice like I thought it would. He comes across as the protagonist but at the end seems to just be there for a ploy in a larger game, not coming to a straight resolution of his own.

Maddie was strongly written; I dug her determined personality and felt for her issues. The story surrounding her scenes was the most entertaining. I kept waiting for a wrap up where’d the two would meet or at least cross lines, but this never happened. Naomi wasn’t as big a deal as one would think when reading the back blurb ­ story is told through her eyes at the beginning but never beyond that point.

While I don’t fault Clegg’s characters that much, the story didn’t work well with them involved.

Each scene was alive with action but each scene also lacked a degree of consistency. I found myself wanting to speed read or skip to get back to the continuance of a sub-story line. The beginning was confusing, while interesting. The middle stayed confusing and started branching off into too many different lines. The ending was the strongest area, especially the last chapter or so. Even though Jake didn’t get all he deserved, the resolution served up a nice, ironic justice and happy ending of sorts for another central character.

The style is narrative and literary. At times it flows smoothly, yet at other times comes across a bit stiffer. Because of the point of view and style used, not much suspense was incorporated through the characters, and any attachment I formed with them was more from reading about their plight, not experiencing it.

Although Naomi didn’t fail in every way, it failed where it needed to succeed the most. The story was inconsistent, the pacing unsteady, the characters good but not focused on evenly, and the style withdrawn. Give it a chance if you’re a follower of Clegg, but if you’re a newbie sampling his work, try others by him instead.
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Provided you can outlast the first few heavily stylized chapters, you might find an passably entertaining horror story in Naomi. The titular character has either killed herself (or perhaps been killed) in a New York subway station, after which her former boyfriend is haunted by her memory. Additionally, the uncovering of the burial ground of a "witch holocaust" in Greenwich Village sets forces loose beneath Manhattan which will draw all of the characters together in a final confrontation. Clegg presents a mythic underground culture that has echoes of Gaiman's Neverwhere. When he isn't distracted by setting mood by employing a rambling literary style, Clegg tells a competent story with reasonably good characterization that makes me show more inclined to try another of his books. show less
I just couldn't get into this. I couldn't find myself invested in the outcome of any character besides Maddy, whom isn't the main protagonist....reading about the old witches, and Mandy's possession were the only highlights for me.The story felt discombobulated. After finishing the book, I'm left feeling like I'm not 100% percent sure I understand exactly what was going on.

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Author Information

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76+ Works 4,331 Members

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Naomi
Original publication date
2001
People/Characters
Naomi Cross; Joseph Cotton; Romeo; Naomi Faulkner; Jake Richmond
Important places
Greenwich Village, New York, New York, USA; New York, New York, USA
Dedication
For Brooke Borneman--With thanks to every subscriber of the List, as well as to Dorchester Publishing and Subterranean Press.
First words
"Blood-red rose with thorns," someone whispered.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Today, the Serpent is bound.
Blurbers
McCammon, Robert R.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Horror, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
813Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English
LCC
PS3553 .L3916 .N3Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
BISAC

Statistics

Members
156
Popularity
208,940
Reviews
3
Rating
½ (3.53)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
2
ASINs
1