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The Front

The Front

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Author: Patricia Cornwell
Publisher: Putnam Adult
Category: Book

List Price: $22.95
Buy New: $5.45
You Save: $17.50 (76%)



New (76) Used (38) Collectible (2) from $4.25

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 171 reviews
Sales Rank: 343

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 192
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 8.4 x 5.8 x 1

ISBN: 0399154183
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN: 9780399154188
ASIN: 0399154183

Publication Date: May 20, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Audio CD - The Front
  • Hardcover - The Front (Thorndike Press Large Print Basic Series)

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
The audacious new adventure of the At Risk team from Americas #1 bestselling crime writer.

When Patricia Cornwell introduced the quicksilver, cut-to-the-bone style and extraordinary cast of characters of At Risk, the result was electrifying: At Risk is Cornwells finest novel. It works in every way possible fascinating characters, solid plot, great pacing and expertly crafted prose (St. Louis Post-Dispatch); Absolutely the best. Heres hoping well see more of Win, Monique, Nana and Sykes in the coming years. They are the best characters to emerge from Cornwells creative pen since . . . well, Kay Scarpetta (The Denver Post).

At Risk featured Massachusetts state investigator Win Garano, a shrewd man of mixed-race background and a notinconsiderable chip on his shoulder; District Attorney Monique Lamont, a hard-charging woman with powerful ambitions and a troubling willingness to cut corners; and Garanos grandmother, who has certain unpredictable talents that you ignore at your peril.

And in The Front, peril is what comes to them all. D.A. Lamont has a special job for Garano. As part of a new public relations campaign about the dangers of declining neighborhoods, shes sending him to Watertown to come up with a drama, and she thinks she knows just the case that will serve. Garano is very skeptical, because he knows that Watertown is also the home base for a loose association of municipal police departments called the FRONT, set up in order that they dont have to be so dependent on the statemuch to Lamonts anger. He senses a much deeper agenda herebut he has no idea just how deep it goes. In the days that follow, hell find that Lamonts task, and the places it leads him, will resemble a house of mirrorseverywhere he turns, hes not quite sure if what hes seeing is true.

Falsehoods rule, warns his grandmother. And they can also kill.

This is the master writing at the absolute top of her game. You will never guess what lies behind The Front.



Customer Reviews:   Read 166 more reviews...

1 out of 5 stars What happened?   July 5, 2008
This is by far the weakest book Cornwell has written. The characters are flat and undeveloped, the plot takes meaningless tangents, all the while with gratuitous political comments that date the book too closely to now to make it have any type of re-readability.

If this had been the first book I had read by her (and I've read all of them) I would have never picked up another book.

Something is wrong and I have no idea what it is, but I will be quite cautious about spending money on her next book. I don't like wasting money.



5 out of 5 stars BACK TO WRITING GOOD BOOKS   July 3, 2008
 1 out of 3 found this review helpful

As they say ........ Short, sweet and to the point. No wasted dialogue, no prolonged desciptive passage, no endless pages of inner turmoil by the characters. Just a very enjoyable read. This may be one of Cornwell's best since the early days of Kay Scarpetta. Enjoyed the new characters very much, and look forward to their return in a future novel. I'm not sure the title totally fits the book content, but highly recommended nonetheless. Well done!!!!


1 out of 5 stars Trite and poorly written   July 1, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

I was very disappointed in this book. VERY trite, VERY poorly written and I think Cornwell has definitely slipped into the "I have written too many books to worry about being good anymore" writer's area. I believe her last decent book (and I have read ALL of them) was Final Precinct.


4 out of 5 stars Another web of intrigue from bestselling author Patricia Cornwell   June 30, 2008
 1 out of 3 found this review helpful

THE FRONT is the second police procedural in Patricia Cornwell's new At Risk series. It stars Massachusetts state police officer Win Garano and his boss, District Attorney Monique Lamont, a megalomaniac who is always looking for a crisis or a mission that will propel her into the spotlight. Here, she wants to focus on what she perceives is the deterioration of the state's neighborhoods. And what better way to accomplish all of her goals than to solve a very cold case?

Since she has jurisdiction over all the homicides in Massachusetts, Lamont sends Garano to Watertown, where the rape and murder of a blind young British woman has never been solved. Not only does Lamont expect him to work the 45-year-old case, she wants him to prove her theory: that the Boston Strangler, Albert DeSalvo, killed Janie Brolin. Of course no one ever actually proved he was guilty of any of the murders he was suspected of committing, and while his DNA is available, the woman's is not. Nevertheless, he makes the trip and learns he will be working with "Stump," the lead detective in Watertown.

Garano often wonders why she works as a cop when she could retire and run her very successful imported cheese, wine and fresh food culinary boutique. That's where he finds her when he arrives in Watertown. Stump is furious because she doesn't want to work this case, much less with Garano, and hates Lamont. But she and Garano have a friendly adversarial relationship, and they retire to the back room of the shop to talk: "Why Watertown? That's what you should be curious about," she tells him. The case is "worth more than one thing. She has other agendas. It's also about the FRONT ... Friends, Resources, Officers, Networking Together ... a coalition [that is giving law enforcement communities the opportunity to rely] less and less [on] the state police." Lamont hates these people and figured out a way to diminish what they're trying to do by making it look as though they can't solve this or any other cold case.

A short time later at New Scotland Yard, Detective Superintendent Jeremy Killien is ruminating about why "the commissioner [has dropped] a bloody bomb on him. An unsolved forty-five year old murder that didn't even occur in the UK." Of course Lamont called London, spoke to the commissioner, and sold him on the idea of shining an international spotlight on the Brolin case. "She already has extravagant publicity planned, including a BBC special that she guarantees would air if [the Brits] participate." Killien is very skeptical.

In a discussion with his boss, he is told, "When she first approached the Yard ... I had the matter looked into, which included finding out something about her. Just the usual checks ... and we've come up with a disturbing bit of information --- not about the case ... but about Lamont herself and cash transactions and donations that have come to the attention of the U.S. Treasury Department. Turns out her name is in the Defense Intelligence Agency's database..."

While spinning her webs of intrigue from her ivory tower, Lamont is probably unaware that "she is on a no fly list ... [also] a sizeable contribution she ... made to a children's relief fund in Romania ... is suspected of trafficking in orphans, supplying them to Al-Qaeda so they can be used as suicide bombers," the commissioner tells Killien. He continues by saying that this is a great opportunity to investigate Lamont without her knowledge.

While these plans are coming to fruition, the investigation into Janie Brolin's murder is ongoing. Garano and Stump are brainstorming when Garano explains to Stump that the neighborhood where Brolin was killed used to be home to mobsters. He asks her if she ever thought about why no real crime, especially a murder, was committed on those streets. As he's trying to debunk Lamont's Boston Strangler theory, he impresses upon Stump that he believes a cover-up was put in place, "a team effort ... collusion" to hide the machinations of The Mob and protect their territory. He asks her if, knowing this, she believes that "some Boston Strangler lowlife [would've] dared step foot anywhere near Janie Brolin's apartment." If, he continues, DeSalvo was so incredibly stupid as to wander into that neighborhood, is it really possible that he would have gotten out in one piece?

As the narrative unfolds and Garano continues his task, he feels as if has entered a maze with no exit. Will he ever find what he is after? How will he know if he does? Nothing in this case seems to be what it appears. Patricia Cornwell, best known for her Kay Scarpetta novels, has turned a new corner in her writing career with these At Risk novellas --- stories scaled back a bit and focused on character as well as plot. She told an interviewer that "the Garano books, the stories, must have a lot of horsepower but be very tight ... no wasted space or weight and an intensely fun ride." And she's right. Fans and new readers will certainly enjoy this change of pace.

--- Reviewed by Barbara Lipkien Gershenbaum



1 out of 5 stars Cornwell crashes and burns   June 29, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

Once my favorite writer, Patricia Cornwell has lost her touch. This book is worse than the last, At Risk. Cornwell manages to blast Republicans, Christianity and The Patriot Act. It seems that she has decided to use her books as a forum, albeit one sided for her political agenda. Goodbye Patricia; I did so enjoy the Scarpetta books. The book is also a ripoff at only 180 pages.

 

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