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Thoughtful western about results of mob justice.
A study in mob psychology.
An Incidental Work of Art

Hunting Season by Nevada Barr reviewNevada Barr is great!
Good entry in Anna Pigeon seriesAnna's romance with Sheriff Paul Davidson, with its ups and downs, adds interest and humanity to Anna's character. Too bad there isn't more about sister Molly!
Since reading "Deep South", I have visited the Natchez Trace Parkway. Both that book and this one evoke the area, its eerieness and its history very well.
Trace Evidence

Grin And Bear ItBlood Lure by Nevada Barr is a very good mystery. It isn't her best Anna Pigeon novel, but still a worthy read. Anna, our ranger and sleuth, is on a training trip to Glacier National Park to learn about wildlife DNA studies and grizzly bears. She is working with Joan, the bear expert, and Rory, a moody teenager on an Earthwatch trip. Rory's stepmom plays the role of dead body. Suspects abound [both human and ursine], clues abound, and even though the end of the novel runs towards the preposterous, the ending is not out of keeping with the earlier novels AND it could happen in real life. Remember folks, Anna Pigeon is a fictional character and most likely gets away with things that would rip right out of the envelope of the permissible in real life. That said, the end brings my rating down low enough to give it 4 stars. This isn't the Anna Pigeon novel I would recommend a new reader start with. My advice is to start at the beginning of the series with Track Of The Cat or, if you must dip in partway through the series, I would advise you start with Ill Wind or Liberty Falling.
Still a fan!I was a tad disappointed with the storyline in this mystery. Unless I am just getting really good at picking out clues... I very nearly had the whole story figured out by the half way point. I kind of felt the author just needed to take a break awhile before coming up with the answers to how she was going to continue to flesh out Anna's private life in Mississippi so wrote this little vacation story just to fulfill her contract. And that is ok! I still enjoyed Anna and the escapades that surrounded her on this trip. I just know that I have been enthralled an unable to put to the book down for other of Barr's novels, and not so much for this one.
A delightful and educational look at Glacier National ParkBarr unravels her clues carefully and fairly; the reader has ample opportunity to put everything together (along with Anna) to solve the mystery. Yet the clues weren't blatantly obvious. Barr did a terrific job with her plotting on this book, and she deserves a pat on the back. BLOOD LURE is well worth reading. Thumbs up!


A good read if you don't think about it to muchRielly brings back Shane Scholfield, from his earlier book Ice Station. This time out Scholfield and his team are guarding the President on a visit to a top secret military base.
Granted nobody really reads this kind of book for its literary merit, but a bomb attached to the President's heart? Come on!
But on the plus side, Rielly does a great job with the action scenes. Which is pretty much all the book is.
Reilly doesn't bother with character development either...
A worthy successor to Ice Station...Now...a basic summary of the plot is fairly decently given on this page anyway..and giving anymore away would be a crime, suffice to say expect twists galore.
Above all else, this is a sequel to Ice Station, so reading that first will make Area 7 make more sense and be more fulfilling. The characters of Shane Schofield, Libby Gant, and "mother" return.
As with any other Reilly book, those seeking truth and absolute believability should look elsewhere, but those seeking out action have come to the right place. This book brims with action and with Reilly's unique writing style, you can't put it down. I read it in less than 24 hours(about 18 hours of which were devoted to school and sleep, the other 6 more or less to Area 7.)
Basically, if you want kickass action, adventure, and white knuckle excitement, then I'd reccomend anything by Reilly in a heartbet, but those who come out of a movie or finish a book and go "Yeah, right, like that could ever happen" may not have the right mindset for this book.
On a scale of 1-10, I'd say a 9.5 or so.
Read this book in one sitting.Tom Clancy sets up his books for about 800 pages, then has 100 pages of action at the end. If you take that last 100 pages of Clancy's books, and extend it throughout the whole story, you've got Matt Reilly!
Overall, Matt's latest offering is right on par with the rest of his books (Ice Station, Temple, Contest). They all have the same pace, cool weapons, and outrageous action scenes. So put on a Hans Zimmer movie score and sit back for another edge-of-your-seat installment from Australia's action kid.


Disappointing, even for an avid Vegas Book reader
Interesting, revealing and entertaining
Unlike any other gambling author

A cerebral mysteryLike all Anna Pigeon novels, this moves slowly. It does take quite a while for the bones of the mystery to appear but Anna Pigeon is such a likeable heroine and Barr such a good writer that the book never seems to drag. At times, Barr's stream-of-conciousness style of writing can be hard to follow but overall the novel is a fun read.
Her best novel to date...something for fans of every stripe!
Great backdrop in Ellis Island!I loved the descriptions of the crumbling buildings on the islands and found them to be wonderful eery backdrops for intrigue.
The suspense plot kept my interest and gave me plenty of thrills
even as I enjoyed the gentler suspense of the sub-plot of Anna's ailing sister. I'm delighted to have discovered Nevada Barr's works.


Great Story, but Ellroy slips a bitFirst, the story. It is entertaining throughout, and there is never a dull moment. It picks up directly where "American Tabloid" left off, Dallas on the day of the Kennedy Assasination, with two of the consiprators and main characters from "Tabloid", Pete Bondurant, Mob Muscle and sometimes CIA operative, and Ward Littell, Lawyer to the Mob and Howard Hughes, and newly reninstated operative for J. Edgar Hoover. Bondurant has just gotten married and is in town to watch the fireworks. Littell is flown in by Hoover to make sure and FBI connection to the assasination is erased. A third main character is also introduced here, Wayne Tedrow, Jr., a Las Vegas Cop who has been paid the titular $6000 to kill a pimp running from the mob in Vegas. With his usual style for conspiracy and plot, Ellroy weaves all of these stories into the same fabric, as coincidence and circumstance draw these three together over the 1960's, covering a Mob plot to bilk Howard Hughes, Heroin smuggling in Vietnam, and various other 60's conspiracies that Oliver Stone would love to call his own. Ellroy is definitly writing fiction. He's not spinning a yarn he thinks is the truth, he's just telling an interpretation of what MIGHT have happened. And it's gripping reading, written in his now-perfected staccatto prose. However, the story is actually too big. Too many plot threads are woven together to get these three main characters together again and again. By putting them at the center of every big event of the 60's, Ellroy is simply asking too much of the reader. The consipracies are too vast and too connected, unlike the rather simple JFK assasination theory offered up in "Tabloid". While this novel remains intense, it drifts too much too often to rank among his finest work.
The second problem is teh character of Wayne Tedrow, Jr. He is too simply drawn, his motivation and desires too obvious for him to be as deep and conflicted as Bonderant and Littell. All we know is he hates his father but has his father's rage. And that's all there is too him. For Ellroy, who has painted such marvelous characters such as Edmund Exley and Buzz Meeks in previous work, this is almost sad. But it is forgiveable as Littell just gets more and more conflicted and complicated, and Bonderant has to make incredibly difficult decisions.
I would give the book 3 1/2 stars if I was able, but since I can't, I give it a 4, because it's closer to a four. Ellroy still hasn't written a BAD novel in my opinion, but I prefer even "The Black Dahlia" to "The Cold Six Thousand", which probably puts me in the minority. It's is still a great read, if not a great book, and for any Ellroy fan I recommend it. If you're new to Ellroy, pick up "American Tabloid" or "The Big Nowhere" first, and if you like what you read, head over to this one. You need to know Ellroy before you can truly enjoy it.
A Dark follow-up to "American Tabloid"
700 pages of adrenaline fueled savagery

A Wonderful Love Story
Insightful look at the differences one can overcome.
A curious combination of memoir and fiction.I thoroughly enjoyed this book. The characters are strong and believable as odd as it might seem. You can't help but love them as they stumble along trying to make it all work. Sara is an incredible mom of two children that play a pivotal part in all of her decisions. She allows us to see her human side and shares her confusion as well as her problem solving capabilities, most of all she has heart. I for one thank her for a story well told. I can't help but wonder what part of the story is fiction. Kelsana 5/22/01


Strange Concept For a BookI found the book to be kinda long-winded & irrelevent to the concept of writing/meeting Gacy. There was just too much "mush" for it to be a compelling read. The only part I enjoyed was when the author would quote Gacy.
Find something better to read.
The topic is the only thing that saves this.Jason Moss is a jerk. I didn't like reading about him. He complains a lot about his mom, and his girlfriend, and about how weird it is that he likes true crime...as if he's the only one in the world who is interested in serial killers or something annoying like that. He is very cocky...it's almost like he thinks the experts on serial killers (Ressler, and Douglas) missed something...becoming a victim. And when he tries his approach out on John Wayne Gacy, it's fun to see the outcome of his very foolish arrogance. It's almost funny.
Though Jason Moss as a person stinks, at least he managed to get a lot of interesting information about Gacy, Dahmer, and Ramirez.
Dangerous Game of Cat & Mouse

Good effort, but many shortcomings
Great! easy to find and follow trails
Book Triumphs Over Several Summits