Blindside (FBI Thriller)
Blindside (FBI Thriller) book cover

Blindside (FBI Thriller)

Hardcover – July 28, 2003

Price
$14.69
Format
Hardcover
Pages
384
Publisher
G. P. Putnam's Sons
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0399150562
Dimensions
6.34 x 1.77 x 9.34 inches
Weight
1.1 pounds

Description

From Publishers Weekly The newest installment in historical romance author Coulter's FBI series (Eleventh Hour, etc.) delivers some of the things her fans have come to expect-a fast-moving investigation, a mind-bending mystery-but readers will have difficulties getting past the book's wooden dialogue, pointless plot digressions and superficial characterizations. Married FBI agents Dillon Savich and Lacey Sherlock are on the trail of a serial killer who targets math teachers, but when Sam Kettering, the son of their widower friend Miles, is kidnapped, they turn their attention to getting the boy back. Six-year-old Sam and Sheriff Katie Benedict, of Jessborough, Tenn., already have the situation in hand, however. After escaping from his kidnappers, Sam runs into single mother Katie, and now all they have to do is wait for the cavalry to arrive. To everyone's surprise, the kidnappers resurface, leaving Katie and the FBI wondering who's really behind the attempts. While Savich and Sherlock return to Washington, D.C., to all-too-easily wrap up their serial killer investigation, Miles and Katie pursue their primary suspects and decide whether to marry for the sake of their kids, who bonded instantly. The relationship between Miles and Katie is hasty and underdeveloped, and their brash investigative methods will raise eyebrows. Still, the mystery at the heart of this talky tale is intriguing and the pacing is brisk, which makes this a capable, if not thrilling, summer diversion.Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. From Booklist The sheriff of Jessborough, Tennessee, Katie Benedict, meets up with best-seller queen Coulter's ever popular FBI agents, Sherlock and Savich, when she and her five-year-old daughter, Keely, rescue a six-year-old boy fleeing kidnappers. He is the son of Miles Kettering, a former FBI agent. Sam is so traumatized that a local psychiatrist thinks he should remain in Katie and Keely's house, along with his father. But after another kidnapping attempt, Katie realizes that the motive behind the attacks is an unusual one, and that the relentless kidnappers will never give up. Along the way to solving the mystery, Katie runs into a sadomasochistic couple: the pastor of the Sinful Children of God Church and his bizarre wife, who just happens to be the sister of one of the kidnappers. Meanwhile, Savich is working on the case of a serial killer who is targeting math teachers. Even though Coulter's eighth FBI thriller (the last was Eleventh Hour [BKL Jl 02]) is marred by some continuity and consistency problems, it still delivers an entertainingly romantic mystery with endearing new characters as well as beloved recurring ones. Diana Tixier Herald Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved Catherine Coulter is the author of the bestselling FBI suspense novels The Cove , The Maze , The Target , The Edge , Riptide , Hemlock Bay , and Eleventh Hour . Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 1 It was pitch black. There was no moon, no stars, just low-lying rain-bloated clouds, as black as the sky. Dillon Savich was sweating in his Kevlar vest even though it was fifty degrees. He dropped to his knees, raised his hand to stop the agents behind him, and carefully slid into position so he could see into the room. The window was dirty, the tattered draperies a vomit-brown, with only one lamp in the corner throwing off sixty watts. The rest of the living room was dark, but he could clearly see the teacher, James Marple, tied to a chair, gagged, his head dropped forward. Was he asleep or unconscious? Or dead? Savich couldn't tell. He didn't see Marvin Phelps, the sixty-seven-year-old man who owned this run-down little 1950s tract house on the outskirts of the tiny town of Mount Pleasant, Virginia. From what they'd found out in the hour before they'd converged on this small house, Phelps was a retired math teacher and owned the old Buick sitting in the patched drive. Savich knew from his driver's license that Phelps was tall, skinny, and had a head covered with thick white hair. And for some reason, he was killing other math teachers. Two, to date. No one knew why. There was no connection between the first two murdered teachers. Savich wanted Phelps alive. He wanted the man to tell him why he'd caused all this misery and destroyed two families. For what? He needed to know, for the future. The behavioral science people hadn't ever suggested that the killer could possibly be a math teacher himself. Savich saw James Marple's head jerk. At least he was alive. There was a zigzagging line of blood coming over the top of Mr. Marple's bald head from a blow Phelps must have dealt him. The blood had dried just short of his mouth. Where was Marvin Phelps? They were here only because one of Agent Ruth Warnecki's snitches had come through. Ruth, in the CAU-the Criminal Apprehension Unit-for only a year, had previously spent eight years with the Washington, D.C., police department. Not only had she brought her great street skills to the unit, she'd also brought her snitches. "A woman can never be too rich, too thin, or have too many snitches" was her motto. The snitch had seen Marvin Phelps pull a gun on a guy in the parking lot of a small strip mall, pull him out of his Volvo station wagon, and shove him into an old Buick. The snitch had called Ruth as he was tailing them to this house, and told her he'd give her the whole enchilada for five hundred bucks, including the license plate number of the man taken. Savich didn't want to think about what would have happened to Mr. Marple if the snitch hadn't come through. But Savich shook his head as he looked at the scene through the window. It didn't fit. The other two math teachers had been shot in the forehead at close range, dying instantly. There'd been no kidnapping, no overnight stays tied to a chair with a sixty-watt bulb chasing the shadows. Why change the way he did things now? Why take such a risk by bringing the victim to his own home? No, something wasn't right. Savich suddenly saw a movement, a shadow that rippled over the far wall in the living room. He raised his hand and made a fist, signaling Dane Carver, Ruth Warnecki, and Sherlock that he wanted everyone to stay put and keep silent. They would hold the local Virginia law enforcement personnel in check, at least for a while. Everyone was in place, including five men from the Washington field office SWAT team who were ready to take this place apart if given the word. Every corner of the property was covered. The marksman, Cooper, was in his place, some twenty feet behind Savich, with a clear view into the shadowy living room. Savich saw another ripple in the dim light. A dark figure rose up from behind a worn sofa. It was Marvin Phelps, the man whose photo he'd first seen just an hour ago. He was walking toward John Marple, no, swaggering was more like it. What was he doing behind the sofa? When Phelps wasn't more than a foot from Marple, he said, his voice oddly deep and pleasant, "Are you awake, Jimbo? Come on, I didn't hit you that hard, you pathetic wuss." Jimbo? Savich turned up the volume on his directional receiver. "Do you know it will be dawn in another thirty-seven minutes? I've decided to kill you at dawn." Mr. Marple slowly raised his head. His glasses had slipped down his nose, and with his hands tied behind him, he couldn't do anything about it. He licked at the dried blood beside his mouth. "Yes, I'm awake. What do you want, Philly? What the hell is going on here? Why are you doing this?" Philly? The two men knew each other well enough for nicknames. Phelps laughed, and Savich felt his skin crawl. It was a mad old laugh, scratchy and black, not at all pleasant and deep like his voice. Phelps pulled a knife from inside his flannel shirt, a long hunting knife that gleamed even in the dull light. Savich had expected a gun, not a knife. It wasn't supposed to go down like this. Two dead high school math teachers, and now this. Not in pattern. What was going on here? "You ready to die, Jimbo, you little prick?" "I'm not a prick. What the hell are you doing? Are you insane? Jesus, Philly, it's been over five years! Put down that knife!" But Mr. Phelps tossed the knife from one hand to the other with easy movements that bespoke great familiarity. "Why should I, Jimbo? I think I'm going to cut out your brain. I've always hated your brain, do you know that? I've always despised you for the way you wanted everyone to see how smart you were, how fast you could jigger out magic solutions, you little bastard-" He was laughing as he slowly raised the knife. "It's not dawn yet!" "Yeah, but I'm old, and who knows? By dawn I might drop dead of a heart attack. I really do want you dead before me, Jimbo." Savich had already aimed his SIG Sauer, his mouth open to yell, when Jimbo screamed, kicked out wildly, and flung the chair over backward. Phelps dove forward after him, cursing, stabbing the knife through the air. Savich fired right at the long silver blade. At nearly the same moment there was another shot-the loud, sharp sound of a rifle, fired from a distance. The long knife exploded, shattering Phelps's hand; the next thing to go flying was Phelps's brains as his head exploded. Savich saw his bloody fingers spiraling upward, spewing blood, and shards of silver raining down, but Phelps wouldn't miss his hand or his fingers. Savich whipped around, not wanting to believe what had just happened. The sniper, Kurt Cooper, had fired. Savich yelled "No," but of course it was way too late. Savich ran to the front door and slammed through, agents and local cops behind him. James Marple was lying on his back, white-faced, whimpering. By going over backward he'd saved himself from being splattered by Mr. Phelps's brains. Marvin Phelps's body lay on its side, his head nearly severed from his neck, sharp points of the silver knife blade embedded in his face and chest, his right wrist a bloody stump. Savich was on his knees, untying Jimbo's ankles and arms, trying to calm him down. "You're all right, Mr. Marple. You're all right, just breathe in and out, that's good. Stay with me here, you're all right." "Phelps, he was going to kill me, kill me-oh, God." "Not any longer. He's dead. You're all right." Savich got him free and helped him to his feet, keeping himself between James Marple and the corpse. Jimbo looked up, his eyes glassy, spit dribbling from his mouth. "I never liked the cops before, always thought you were a bunch of fascists, but you saved me. You actually saved my life." "Yeah, well, we do try to do that occasionally. Now, let's just get you out of here. Here's Agent Sherlock and Agent Warnecki. They're going to take you out to the medics for a once-over. You're okay, Mr. Marple. Everything is okay." Savich stood there a moment, listening to Sherlock talk to James Marple in that wonderful soothing voice of hers, the one she had used at Sean's first birthday party. One terrified math teacher wouldn't be a problem compared to a roomful of one-year-olds. Agent Dane Carver helped support James Marple, a slight smile on his face until Sherlock stepped back, and then he and Agent Warnecki escorted Marple to the waiting paramedics. Savich turned back to the body of Marvin Phelps. Cooper had nearly blown the guy's head off. A great shot, very precise, no chance of his knifing Marple in a reactive move, no chance for him to even know what was happening before he died. It wasn't supposed to have happened that way, but Cooper had standing orders to fire if there was imminent danger. He saw Police Chief Halloran trotting toward him, followed by a half-dozen excited local cops, all of them hyped, all of them smiling. That would change when they saw Phelps's body. At least they'd saved a guy's life. But it wasn't the killer they were after, Savich was sure of that. Theirs had killed two women, both high school math teachers. And in a sense, that maniac was responsible for this mess as well. It was probably why Cooper had jumped the gun and taken Phelps out. He saw himself saving James Marple's life and taking out the math teacher killer at the same time. In all fairness, Coop was only twenty-four, loaded with testosterone, and still out to save the world. Not good enough. Savich would see to it that he had his butt drop-kicked and then sentenced to scrubbing out the SWAT team's bathroom, the cruelest penalty anyone could devise. The media initially ignored the fact that this killing had nothing to do with the two math teacher killings. The early evening headlines read: SERIAL KILLER DEAD? And underneath, in smaller letters, because math teachers weren't very sexy: MATH TEACHERS TARGETED. The first two murders were detailed yet again. Only way down the page was it mentioned that the kidnapping and attempted murder of James Marple by Marvin Phelps of Mount Pleasant, Virginia, had nothing to do with the two other math teacher killings. Par for the course. --from Blindside by Catherine Coulter, copyright © 2003 Catherine Coulter, published by G.P. Putnam's Sons, a member of Penguin Group (USA) Inc., all rights reserved, reprinted with permission from the publisher. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • FBI agents Savich and Sherlock face two baffling cases in Catherine Coulter's electrifying new thriller. Catherine Coulter's fast-paced FBI novels featuring married FBI agents Lacey Sherlock and Dillon Savich have rocketed up the
  • New York Times
  • bestseller lists and garnered millions of fans. Coulter's heady blend of action and intrigue grows more intoxicating with each book-and reaches new heights in
  • BlindSide
  • . When six-year-old Sam Kettering is kidnapped and then manages to save himself, Savich and Sherlock join his father-former FBI agent Miles Kettering-to determine why Sam would be abducted and brought to eastern Tennessee. Although the local sheriff, Katie Benedict, kills the kidnappers, the attempts do not stop. The investigation leads them to charismatic, intense evangelist Reverend Sooner McCamy and his enigmatic wife. At the same time, Savich and Sherlock are desperate to locate the killer of five Washington, D.C., teachers. And meet Valerie Rapper, a woman on a mission: she wants Savich in the worst way. . . A riveting novel of knife-edge suspense,
  • BlindSide
  • is Catherine Coulter at the top of her game.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
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★★★★
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(913)
★★★
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(548)
★★
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Most Helpful Reviews

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(2 1/2) BLINDSIDED AND DISAPPOINTED

Catherine Coulter's editor did her a major disservice by not insisting on an extensive rewrite prior to the publication of this book. While it is advertised as "an FBI Thriller" and the next book in the series featuring Dillon Savich and his wife Lacey Sherlock, the author's attempt to fit the book into that mold in order to appeal to her loyal readers will probably backfire by disappointing them. Just as in her previous book, THE ELEVENTH HOUR, Savich and Sherlock are peripheral to the main plot, as is in fact the whole FBI. AND BY TRYING TO GIVE THEM A MEANINGFUL ROLE SHE HAS DETRACTED FROM WHAT COULD HAVE BEEN A FIRST CLASS NOVEL.
The book begins as a standard FBI procedural, with Savich trying to track down an apparent serial killer of math teachers in the Washington, D.C. area. However, after a few chapters that case becomes almost an afterthought to the central plot, the kidnapping of six-year-old Sam Kettering, the son of Savich's friend and widowed former FBI agent Miles Kettering. Sam escapes his kidnappers after being mysteriously tranported to eastern Tennessee and is saved from being recaptured by the local sheriff, Katie Benedict. (This all happens within the first thirty pages.) As he gradually recovers from the post traumatic stress brought on by his ordeal, Sam forms a strong bond with Keely, Katie's five-year-old daughter.
So, the stage is set. The kidnappers are still on the loose. The reasons for Sam's kidnapping are a complete mystery. Miles is a former FBI agent who wants to interface with the local FBI office. Of course, Savich and Sherlock want to help their good friend. As the investigation begins, it soon leads to the Reverend Sooner McCamy and his beautiful wife Elsbeth. They appeared in town several years ago and he has founded a very strict fundamentalist evangelical church and which has attracted an extremely devoted congregation. Clearly these elements provide enough potential for a great plot, an interesting police procedural, and a concomitant opportunity to examine how moments of stress can become life changing experiences (for Sam, Keely, Katie, and Miles). Unfortunately, the negatives of the book outweigh the positives.
The dialog is stilted and often seems contrived; it was also jarring to me that in their conversations the characters are consistently referred to by their first names as is Dillon (Savich), yet throughout the book even in the same paragraphs the author constantly refers to him as Savitch. It is understanable since this has been his personna throughout the series, but the constant juxtaposition is disturbing. (This is one of the many things a good proofreader should have caught; among other errors even the number of teachers murders as listed in the promotional blurb on the dust jacket is incorrect.) The chapter breaks were on occasion absurd. It seemed like in an attempt to mimic James Patterson the publisher decided no chapters could be too long so some breaks were even right in the middle of conversations. (E.g. pages 196 and 232) One other minor complaint is that I still have no idea why Valerie Ripper was in this story except to provide some misdirection.
More importantly than these minor annoyances, I have five major complaints which are responsible for my low rating. First, the story is more like a Harlequin romance novel than an FBI thriller. Second, the villians seem almost immortal. They are constantly put in situations where they should be captured or killed but continually and sometimes miraculously escape to continue to torment Miles, Katie, Keely and Sam. However, after the first few times the surprise element is gone and it just seems unreal. And it also seems that it would have ocurred to Katie and Miles that danger continued to exist. Third, early during the book it becomes relatively obvious who is behind the kidnapping, and while the reasons remain a mystery a lot of the intrigue disappears. Fourth, Sam and Keely are wonderful, but a lot of their charm is the innocence engendered by their youth. Yet, in order for the plot to work, they have to be so precocious for their ages that it strains the reader's credulity. Last, the D.C. murders are solved almost as an afterthought to flesh out the book and give Savich a larger role, but the two cases are totally unrelated and the reader is provided basically no meaningful clue in that case until after the murderer is apprehended.
So what saved this book from a one star rating? First, Sam And Keely and their magical relationship. The author actually made it come alive. They and Katie, whose character was wonderfully drawn, were the central elements of the story and if a lot of the distractions were eliminated this story could have been first rate. Second, the way the story evoked the small town rhythms of eastern Tennessee and the beauty of the Smoky Mountains resonated with me. Third, the basic elements of the plot had great potential if there had been a greater element of mystery and the solution had involved a greater examination of the philosophical implications inherent in the crime. Fourth, it was a very fast moving, easy read that kept my attention despite its flaws.
So, I generously rounded up my rating to three stars, and recognize that die hard C fans might enjoy this book. But if you haven't read ELEVENTH HOUR, read that instead. It is a better plot, although the characters aren't quite as good except with the exception of Nick Jones. But the reason that the technique of two mysteries works so well in that story is that they are ineluctably interrelated, rather than simply a device which in the end detracts from a more nuanced development of the main story.
35 people found this helpful
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Fine addition to series

This book published on a heavy bond paper feels a lot more substantial than the 370 pages that it contains but the story is entertaining and the characters appealing. The eighth entry in Catherine Coulter's exciting FBI series it is not quite as well conceived as the first four, THE COVE, THE MAZE, THE TARGET and THE EDGE, but it is an improvement over the weaker recent entries HEMLOCK BAY and THE ELEVENTH HOUR. In this episode Sherlock and Savich come to the aid of former FBI agent and friend Miles Kettering after his six year old son ,Sam, has been kidnapped. Sam manages to escape and is recovered by local sherrif and single mom, Katie Benedict. It is now up to Sherlock, Savich, Miles and Katie to discover the reasons for Sam's abduction and to apprehend the culprits. The story moves quickly along with the appropriate amounts of danger, suspense and romance to make a great summer read. (I do agree, however, with a previous review that occasionally the relationship between Sherlock and Savich and their somewhat stilted dialogue slows rather than enhances the plot.) Overall this is another winner for Coulter.
22 people found this helpful
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Catherine Coulter scores another BIG hit!

Husband and wife FBI team Savich and Sherlock are back in their most grueling case yet.
Six year-old Sam Kettering is kidnapped, but as his father FBI agent Miles Kettering, has taught him, he fights his way to freedom. Rescued by sheriff Kate Benedict, Sam is safely returned to his father, but his nightmare is far from over.
Savich and Sherlock begin their search for the kidnappers, but two questions remain unanswered...Why was Sam the target, and why do the kidnappers want him so badly?
The search for answers leads Savich and Sherlock to strange evangelist Reverend Sooner McCamy, and his wife, but a shocking turn leads to more unanswered questions, and if that's not bad enough the couple is pulled into an additional case, one that has them on a hunt for the killer of five teachers in Washington, D.C.
`Blindside' is another stunning entry in the FBI thriller series. The gripping plot is peopled with likable characters, and twists galore. The pages turn fast as two separate story lines unfold all leading to an explosive climax.
Catherine Coulter has, once again, scored a big hit with a novel that's better than the previous entries in the FBI series, and that's no small accomplishment because all the novels in this series are great. Combining action, murder, great characters, and tons of unexpected plot twists Coulter continues to dazzle with novels that are original and entertaining, and are sure to please her legion of fans. Readers of this fast-paced series will lap this up in one sitting, and be anxious for the next entry.
A MUST read!
Nick Gonnella
8 people found this helpful
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Blindside

Well, I don't know what else I expected but she has done it again. This book was so good, I couln't put it down. I have the entire series in hardcover and will not part with them. This book was full of adventure just the way I like it. The love story was touching and you got very excited for the characters in it. You fell in love with the children and of course as always Dillon and Sherlock make you love them all over again.
4 people found this helpful
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moves right along, twists and turns

I was pleasently surprised with this novel after reading what several reviewers had written.
I am a fan of Coulter and enjoy this FBI series, If someone thought character development missing it was because they haven't read past books with Savich and Sherlock, anyone who knows this team would enjoy this read and the new Sheriff Katie with Miles & kids! Oh yeah I hope to see much more in future books as these characters deveolp. I thought keeping 2 plots going was good and kept me reading. Give it a shot.
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Boring and a waste of reading time

A lazy effort at best. Not one solid character or developed plot. Painful to finish; I wish I had'nt.
4 people found this helpful
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Fast-Paced Thriller

Though well-know for her many historical novels, Ms. Coulter has engendered many fans with her contemporary Sherlock and Savich series. Married FBI agents Lacey Sherlock and Dillon Savich take somewhat of a back seat in this latest Coulter novel, but they play an important part, nevertheless. When friend and former FBI agent, Miles Kettering is devastated when his six-year-old son Sam is kidnapped, Sherlock and Savich are soon on the case, especially when Sam miraculously escapes the Tennessee cabin where he was hidden by his captors.
Discovered running in the rain by local Sheriff Katie Benedict and her young daughter, Keely, Sam is quickly brought to safety in Katie's home where his father and Savich arrive soon after. But the suspense is far from over, as the kidnappers are relentless in their pursuit of Sam, despite the combined protection of several law enforcement agencies.
Together, Katie, Miles, Savich, and Sherlock discover that one of the kidnappers has a sister living nearby, Elsbeth McCamy, the wife of the ultra-pious Reverend McCamy, pastor of the Sinful Children of God Church. While the good Reverend and his wife repeatedly deny any involvement in Sam's kidnapping, the coincidence of the close proximity of the kidnapper's cabin to his sister's home is too obvious to be ignored.
Thrilling suspense continues with a bizarre twist when the purpose behind the kidnapping is finally revealed. With the ending packing another punch, true to Ms. Coulter's white knuckled novels, the read isn't over until the final page is written, as unbeknownst to lovers Miles and Katie; danger lurks around the next corner.
3 people found this helpful
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Weak! Weak! Weak!

What happened to the gripping plots that I usually associate with Catherine Coulter? What happened to rich characterization and page turning suspense? This effort falls short in a plainly weak attempt. The characterization is thin and the plot lacks the intrigue that makes thrillers thrilling. The female lead in this novel is supposed to be strong, but comes across as weak. The bimbo at the gym served no purpose at all, and why was Wade's quest for Karen's job hammered into us at every turn? The Sheriff should have the skill to at least shoot where she's aiming. It was insulting to every small Sheriff's office in the southeast by the way the deputies were portrayed as incompetent and completely fallible. I grew more disgruntled as I plowed through this 370-page noose. By the last page, I felt cheated by the whole experience. Your time would better be spent in an afternoon nap than in reading this WEAK thriller that lacks intrigue.
3 people found this helpful
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A thriller with offensive language.

I love a good mystery. Ms. Coulter's plots will keep you turning the pages. However I became tired of constantly having to skip over all the offensive language. I have decided NOT to read any more of Catherine Coulter's books (I read 6) because I am offended by her use of God and Jesus as curse words. There are hundreds of other things her characters could say to show shock and anger. I kept hoping she wouldn't always use the same language, but apparently she assumes it is what the readers want.
2 people found this helpful
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Complete Confusion!

It was very hard for me to follow this book. Suddenly characters developed bonds out of thin air. The characters seem to have ADHD, and talk of completely unrelated events. I've read thick and complicated "thriller/scary" novels like Black House, and zipped right through those books. Blind Side was just a mess. There was no real beginning or ending for these characters. The book is like a puff of smoke. Fading out as quickly as it faded in.
2 people found this helpful