So I just started reading The Sun Down Motel by Simone St. James, and was really enjoying the creepy atmosphere, when this passage took me out of it:
>It wasn't that impressive a place; Google Earth had told me that much. Downtown was a grid of cafes, laundromats, junky antique stores, apartment rental buildings, and used-book stores, nestled reverently around a grocery store and a CVS.
Used book stores? Most small towns in middle of nowhere America don't even have one book store, let alone several. What she is describing is a college town. Or a hippie/hipster town that's probably within driving distance of a college. Not your average shitty little upstate locale.
The last time I saw the author get a setting wrong like that was The Woman In the Window, and I just gave up on the book. With this one, I'm not so sure, because otherwise I really do like the author's writing style. How do you get past a dumb detail like that and regain confidence in the author and the story?
(NO SPOILERS PLEASE, I'M STILL VERY EARLY ON)
Jaded_Cryptographer t1_iya40rm wrote
I understand the feeling - I got really annoyed at a Stephen King book where he kept referring to the whites of people's eyes as corneas (they're scleras!), but it's really hard to enjoy just about any book if you can't get over relatively minor errors like that.