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Police are baffled, but Christine’s eerie connection with the kidnapped child sends Dylan on a chilling investigation of her own. Is the pasty, elusive stranger Peter Terry to blame? Exploding light bulbs, the deadly buzz of a Texas rattlesnake, and the vivid, disturbing dreams of a little girl are just pieces in a long trail of tantalizing clues leading Dylan in her dogged search for the truth.
In her third installment of the Dylan Foster series, Wells crafts a dark Christian supernatural thriller with lighter romance notes. Southern Methodist University psychology professor Dylan Foster fears that Peter Terry, the demon who stalks her, is on the move again. Nicholas, her friend Maria Chavez's five-year-old son (conceived after Maria was brutally raped in an earlier book), is snatched at a birthday party in a park near Dallas. Five-year-old birthday girl Christine Zocci, who witnesses the abduction and is hyperattuned to the supernatural, ends up in the emergency room after she mysteriously goes into cardiac arrest. Her clues about Nicholas's kidnapper may enable Dylan to find him-unless time runs out. Wells does a fine job developing Dylan's character, but is less successful showing the terror of the kidnapping and Maria's response, which seems far too calm. The suspense builds nicely, however, and the demon's use of a rattlesnake (real or unreal? Dylan isn't sure) will give ophiophobic readers appropriate chills. When the Day of Evil Comesand The Soul Huntershould be read first to follow the plot line; as a stand-alone this may be confusing. Christian readers who like their suspense with a heavy dollop of the supernatural should find this series to their taste. (Feb.)
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Anonymous
Posted July 11, 2008
It¿s bad enough that a demon named Peter Terry has been harassing Dylan by unleashing rodents in her home, threatening her career, and in general being a stinkin¿ nuisance. But now a child dear to Dylan¿s heart has been kidnapped and she will stop at nothing to find him and bring him back to his mother. Thankfully she has Christine Zocci, a spiritually aware six-year-old, on her side. Her dreams and memories will prove more valuable than anyone realizes. Is Peter Terry to blame for the kidnapping? Or is there someone else who wants the child even more? Can Dylan find out before it¿s too late? I reject the notion that some people are doomed to bad luck, but in the case of Dylan Foster, I may have to rethink my position. Actually, I just think God is trying and testing her (without her knowing it) and will not put Peter Terry back on his leash until she whittles down her list of Top Ten Terrible Traits. As in her first two novels, When the Day of Evil Comes and Soul Hunter, Wells exhibits her familiar dry wit and ability to take irregular supernatural events and make them believable. One does not have to read her previous novels in order to understand and enjoy this one (although this reader advises it purely on the basis that they should not be missed). Wells does a superb job of interjecting just enough information for the new reader to follow along without bogging down those who have kept up with every novel. My Soul to Keep is supernatural suspense at its height, and Wells does not get near the attention she deserves for such well-thought-out story. I highly recommend all three novels and hope there will be many more to come.
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Posted April 24, 2008
Melanie Wells captures her readers from the get go with Dylan Foster, a likeable heroine who knows she is not perfect, compelling villains with creepy powers, and a well crafted plot featuring a kidnapped child at the center of the doings. At a picnic, Nicholas, the son of Dylan¿s friend, is kidnapped by a man in an old car or van. Plot twists are added by references to Peter Terry, a menacing figure from Dylan¿s past, the sound of rattlesnakes in Dylan¿s home, and troubling hard to understand visions by the heroine and her young friend, Christine. As the perfect antidote to the terror of the kidnapping and frightening events, fear for the captive boy, and Christine under attack, readers are treated to Dylan¿s thoughts, including ¿God has to smack me with his ruler on my desk to get my attention.¿ The heroine is a compulsive sink cleaner, not one of my compulsions! When she hears the sound of a rattlesnake under her kitchen sink, she thinks ¿The sad truth is, if I paid as much attention to my soul as I do my sink, I would probably be a whole lot better off. My sink is pristine. My soul could use a can of comet and some elbow grease.¿ This is an ideal thriller with a good dash of humor, and now I plan to read the other two Dylan Foster novels, the first one being ¿When the Day of Evil Comes.¿
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Posted January 25, 2008
My Soul to Keep by Melanie Wells is the finale to the trilogy involving Dylan Foster and her soul-wrenching battle against evil ¿ in the form of a pasty white stranger named Peter Terry. Ms. Wells combines a contagious sense of humor with a sense of spiritual completeness that leaves the reader alternatively laughing out loud or scared to death. As was the case in the other two books, this one is fast-paced with a multitude of plot twists and turns. The veteran thriller reader will have difficulty guessing the ending. This book gets to heart of parental love and captures the essence of a parent¿s helplessness in the face of her child¿s disappearance. Ms. Wells captures the uniqueness of children and gives them respectful voices. She captures a child¿s innocence as well as their sense of love of life. The plot starts out very simply. During a birthday celebration for a 6-year-old friend, Christine Zocci, a little boy is kidnapped. The twists are complex beyond belief. Not exactly trusting the police, Dylan begins an investigation on her own and soon faces a series of bizarre events. Peter Terry feeds off of fears and in previous books Dylan faced an unexplainable swarm of flies. This time it is the sound of the deadly rattle of a Texas rattlesnake in her home and car. Although the novel deals with serious subjects, these are balanced by Dylan¿s wonderful sense of humor. My Soul to Keep has it all ¿ clever dialogue, non-stop action, a very human and likeable main character, and never ending suspense. Dylan is not an overtly religious person she is however spiritual, a believer and her faith guide her through the challenges in her life.
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Posted February 11, 2008
Finished My Soul to Keep earlier this week and LOVED it! Dylan is one of the messiest characters in print, but completely endearing. This is the best of the series and I hope that you choose to enjoy it as well! Can't wait for the next installment...maybe from Christine's point of view...? Earl's? Oh, and make sure to pick up an extra copy for a friend when you buy yours! *smile and wink*
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Professor Dylan Foster teaches psychology at Southern Methodist Universality yet she has no trouble believes in demons and devils since Peter Terry came into her life. He wants souls and he will use whatever means necessary to get them but Dylan temporally defeated him twice. He is the last thing on her mind when her friend Liz Zocci and her daughter Christine are celebrating her birthday in the park with her friend Maria and her son Nicholas.--------------- In the blink of an eye, the party ends when a car stops and someone kidnaps Nicholas. The person tries to take Christine too but her touch burns him. Somehow, someway, Christine is psychically connected to Nicholas and she ends up in the hospital with the same illness Nicholas once had. Peter Terry is also in the picture as light bulbs pop in her home Dylan hears snakes hissing in her home and a gas leek occurs. The demon appears in her dreams but she refuses to give into her fears. Instead she chases every clue including her sleeping subconscious ones that might lead her to Nicholas, even if it means spiritual warfare.----------- Christine has a guardian angel Earl who Dylan sees in the park and she and her mom come to the conclusion there is a spiritual battle taking place in which Christine is the prize. They meet another angel in the hospital who calms Christine Dylan, a believer, is not surprised. She just wishes they would point her to the location where Nicholas is but she has to apply investigate methods instead like a mortal. Melanie Wells has written an exciting pulse pumping thriller.------------ Harriet Klausner
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Overview
As nasty as I knew Peter Terry to be, I never expected him to start kidnapping kids. Much less a sweet, funny little boy with nothing to protect him but a few knock-kneed women, two rabbits, and a staple gun…It’s psychology professor Dylan Foster’s favorite day of the academic year–graduation day. A day of pomp, circumstance, and celebration. And after all the mortar boards are thrown, Dylan and some of her best friends will gather around a strawberry cake to celebrate Christine Zocci’s sixth birthday. But the joyful summer afternoon goes south when a little boy is snatched from a neighborhood park, setting off a ...