Wednesday, August 28, 2013

The Silent Wife/ This book was superb

This book was superb, it yanked me in fully. It is a book that can be read effortlessly in
a couple of days. A relationship of two decades, under no circumstances was a marriage, because neither of them felt it was important. Jodi Brett, a psychologist, with numerous degrees behind her name and Todd Gilbert, a builder, builder, with no diplomas behind his name, met by incident. Jodi was relocating and her moving truck struck Todd's truck in a dazzling Chicago rain. For some reason in-between the shouting and allegations a relationship formulated, and within a short time they moved in with each other. They had a ideal life, thought Jodi. A lovely residence, expensive furnishings, good food, fast cars and good sex. The only concern was the never discussed liaisons that Todd had with other ladies. Jodi, disregarded them, never dealt with them, and lived in a constant state of denial.

This denial appeared to be a condition for both of them. Each of them had a tough, abusive childhood. Only Todd spoke of his. Jodi kept it covered, in deep denial, that appears to be strange for a therapist. They lived an revised life,an altered lifestyle. Todd got what he desired, whenever he wanted, and, Jodi, got what she wanted, she imagined. Jodi dressed in highly-priced beige pants and white shirt while at home,and this seems to be her existence, beige. Just right, no highs, no lows, until something occurs that brings everything failing.This book is along the lines of the good bye Girl but possibly even a little better.Read it///

                                                                       Barnes @Noble
                                         

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Mistress James Patterson (Author), David Ellis (Author) First Patterson clunker

Mistress James Patterson (Author), David Ellis (Author) First Patterson clunker

I have always said i have no idea how Patterson writes a book a month and there all good.This book breaks his streak it sucks.About a man solving the murder of his imaginary girl friend the whole dam book is imaginary beyond belief.Patterson is only responsible for half the blame as he was co author of this book and from the looks of it he wrote the Title and turned it over to Ellis as it is impossible that this is a true Patterson book.Save your money.

Patterson is still the greatest author of our time possibly all time here are a few of his books that prove that.

The Quickie


`The Quickie' is not only one of the finest Patterson novels, it's one of the greatest thrillers this year. There are numerous plots twists and shocks even the most seasoned readers will be delighted

James Patterson has proven, once again, that he is THE master of an un-put-downable read. DO NOT MISS THIS ONE it's excellent.

The Quickie

Judge & Jury



DeGrasse, an aspiring actress and single mom, is not your typical juror. Hoping to get dismissed from the pool, she tells the judge that most of her legal knowledge comes from a bit part curling around a stripper's pole in The Sopranos. But she still ends up as juror #11 in a landmark trial against a notorious mob boss.

Judge & Jury is an easy read but also very entertaining. You'll not be disappointed

You've Been Warned


Fear exists for a reason. And Kristin can only dismiss the warnings for so long. Searching desperately for the truth through the lens of her camera, she can only hope that it's not too late. This novel of psychological suspense is a stunning achievement for thriller master James Patterson, "one of the bestselling writers in history" (New York Sun).

You've Been Warned

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

HIGH HEAT is a extremely enjoyable short story for Reacher fans

HIGH HEAT is a extremely enjoyable short story for Reacher fans. It's a significantly improvement over the earlier Reacher eBooks SECOND SON and DEEP DOWN. The writing is usual Lee Child (superb) and the plot is a typical Reacher plot  - he wanders into town, finds a lovely lady or two, and a lot of issues. And it's pretty brilliant.

Reacher is on his way to pay a visit to his brother at West Point when he stops off in NYC to have a look at the music scene and the college ladies at NYU, but what he discovers is a city held in anxiety of the Son of Sam and enduring a unremitting heat wave.

Right away Reacher witnesses what seems to be to be a female in distress. And Reacher remaining who he is - "I'm not a Marine. I'm the son of a Marine." - he's compelled to intercede. He's only sixteen, but he's already a fully formulated machine that's been fine tuned by street fights on and off-post at military setups the world over.

But it works out he's really set foot into it, because he's crossed paths with the Croselli crime family and the boss isn't about to be shown up by some punk kid who's just rolled into town. Advised off by an out-of-favor female FBI agent, Reacher hooks up with a college girl just as the city is delved into darkness from a power outage.

As Reacher and his associate explore the unique scene that is NYC without power, they meet with someone who Reacher believes is the Son of Sam. Using his unusually keen ability to observe and record information that's such a dominant part of this series, Reacher believes he's deducted a useful piece of information that might help the police catch a serial killer.

With that in mind, Reacher doesn't even flinch to head back into the crime family's controlled area, looking for a disgraced FBI agent, trying to find a way to give her information that can get her career back on track and end the Son of Sam's killing spree.

If you're a fan of the series, then you're going to love Reacher in this eBook - from "the clock in Reacher's head" ticking to midnight to his pretty simple logic in dealing with bad guys: "They could have kept on walking."

This is a teenage Reacher at his absolute best, on the verge of becoming the soldier cop and with all the wit and skills and attitude that readers have come to love about him.


High Heat: A Jack Reacher Novella (Kindle Single)                     Barnes@Noble

Amazon