I don't want to mislead you: ''The Naturals'' is far from perfect. The subplot involving a love triangle between Cassie, Michael and Dean seems shoehorned in to satisfy readers who insist on a bit of kissing in every book they read. It didn't feel credible to me. Events are pretty far-fetched. And it's a light read: bookworms will devour it in a couple of hours. There. All the criticisms are out of the way in just a sentence or two. On to the positive...
... I thoroughly enjoyed ''The Naturals''. I'm a sucker for TV shows like ''Criminal Minds'' and ''Lie to Me'' and ''Hannibal''. And ''The Naturals'' follows the structure of them very wellbut with kids not grownups. There's a particularly murderous crazy person on the loose and a group of people with special talents and flaws in equal measures is after them. Separate threads follow the solving of the mystery and how the group of crime fighters cope with the horrors of what they see and the effect their special talents have on them. So the reader gets to try to solve the mystery before the end of the book ''and'' to explore the tolls that being special, other, can take on a person.
There's an interesting spread of characters within the group - Cassie, who is spiky and standoffish but intelligent and singleminded; Lia, who can be a bitch but who we suspect has a heart of gold really; Sloane, who might be slightly on the autistic spectrum but who is definitely a MENSA-style genius; Michael, who hides his own feelings but can see everyone else's; Dean, who suffers from a past horrific beyond imagining but who is insightful and courageous. Each has a special skill. Each is unsure they ''want'' to be special.