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Privileged Information (Dr. Alan Gregory, 1)

Privileged Information (Dr. Alan Gregory, 1)

List Price: $12.99
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: a typical novel
Review: Alan Gregory, a psychologist, faces ruin when three of his patients die in different settings. In a bid to save his name, his life, and his love, Dr. Alan most unmask this killer who is intent on vengeance.
The noteworthy detail is Lauren's MS, and Stephen White is at his best when showcasing the dilemma of keeping a patient's confidence.
Privileged Information is written leisurely, albeit blandly. Most of the action is carried out in restaurants which mirrors the pace of the novel. Even the interaction between Alan and law enforcement appears contrived.
This book will be most enjoyed when you start it with no expectations.


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A super read!!
Review: I have read all of Stephen White's novels and enjoyed them immensely. However, I have to agree with a couple of the other reviewers that reading them in order is best. I failed to do so and one day when I have forgotten the details I will read his whole series from beginning to end. They are that good. In Priviledged Information we are introduced to Alan Gregory who is a very interesting character. This book is a real thriller and very suspenseful. I could not put it down like all of White's books. I find his books every bit as good as Jonathan Kellerman's. Perhaps more so as his relationships with others are explored more deeply than Alex Delaware's.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Incredibly suspenseful thriller
Review: I read a lot of mystery novels, so there aren't many that get my attention. Stephen White got my attention. It didn't happen right away - the first 100 pages aren't mindgripping, but the last 250 are phenominal.

A psychologist turned detective, Alan seems to have a string of bad patients who all share something in common - death. He tries to put the pieces together, with help from his D.A. girlfriend, who ends up in some trouble herself. The climax is one of the best-written, most suspenseful pieces of writing I have read in a long time. Absolutely wonderful.

White has sold me on his books - I've ordered his others already. If Privileged Information is any indication, he is a very unique writer which those of you who enjoy mystery novels will get quite a bit of enjoyment from.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Privileged Information
Review: I think the thing that impressed me most about this book was the portrayal of psychologist, Alan Gregory, as a human first and a psychologist second. White didn't even wait until his second or third book to have things go really wrong. He heaped it all on Dr. Alan Gregory in this first book, thus successfully opening the door for us to build on the protagonist as a fallible human being with whom things can and do go wrong. And when it rains, it pours. Never mind the adage about things happening in three's--you can double that and just keep going with all the stuff happening to Dr. Gregory. The best part was that although most things worked out in the end, it wasn't your typical happy ending with everything tied up in a neat package. We were left pondering some things and also left knowing that the protagonist was going to need some time to mentally and emotionally recover from all that had happened. I can't wait to read the second installment in this series.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Doctors are human, too.
Review: I think the thing that impressed me most about this book was the portrayal of psychologist, Alan Gregory, as a human first and a psychologist second. White didn't even wait until his second or third book to have things go really wrong. He heaped it all on Dr. Alan Gregory in this first book, thus successfully opening the door for us to build on the protagonist as a fallible human being with whom things can and do go wrong. And when it rains, it pours. Never mind the adage about things happening in three's--you can double that and just keep going with all the stuff happening to Dr. Gregory. The best part was that although most things worked out in the end, it wasn't your typical happy ending with everything tied up in a neat package. We were left pondering some things and also left knowing that the protagonist was going to need some time to mentally and emotionally recover from all that had happened. I can't wait to read the second installment in this series.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Worst book I have ever read
Review: It is not often you come upon "the worst book you have ever read," but for me this one is it. If it weren't for the fact that I have a strange compulsion to finish a book once I've started it, I would not have lasted more than a chapter. Not only did I not empathize with the main character, I did not like him in the least. Plot is ridiculous, character development is clumsy and the love-less love interest with the DA made me thank God I am not a character in White's novel. I can't imagine what other people have seen in this novel but I warn anyone who reads this review to avoid starting something they are not going to want to finish. Run away.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The first in White's Alan Gregory series
Review: Stephen White is a psychologist from Denver, Colorado. This is his first novel, published in 1991. He specializes in murder mystery thrillers with significant psychological overtones. He actually got this book picked up by a major publishing house (Viking Penguin) on his own without an agent which is a major feat. Soon thereafter he was picked up by an agent. As of 2002, he has written 10 novels, several of which have been on the New York Times bestseller list.

The recurring protagonist is a Boulder, Colorado psychologist, Alan Gregory, & there are recurring characters such as Alan's fiancee (later wife) Lauren, and his cop buddy Sam. As someone who lives in Colorado, I have enjoyed the series of books, as they are set in Colorado, & I can identify with the locales. It's also been interesting to watch Alan & Lauren's romance blossom despite significant bumps in the road.

Start with this Stephen White book, & try to read the series in order. Each one is better than the previous one, & the author has become a better writer year by year.

Happy reading!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Excellent beginning to a very good series.
Review: Stephen White, Privileged Information (Pinnacle, 1991)

For eight years I have been laboring under the delusion that Private Practice was Stephen White's first Alan Gregory novel. After discovering my error, I rushed to rectify it and picked up Privileged Information ASAP. And where Private Practice was good enough to get me involved with Alan Gregory and his therapeutic investigations, it pales beside Privileged Information.

The best thing about this novel is that it takes the notion of privilege, something those of us who watch Law and Order religiously are well aware of from the point of view of the police and the prosecutors, and gives us the other side of the argument. Therapist Alan Gregory, as the novel opens, is confronted with the sudden and unforeseeable suicide of one of his patients. The system starts to work, thanks to some leaked information, and various persons ranging from the victim's father to a persistent newshound start crucifying Gregory in the local papers. Through Gregory's conversations with his lawyer, the deputy assistant DA, and the police, we get to see privilege from the side of those whose professions it's designed to protect, and we get a full understanding of how frustrating privilege can be to those responsible for keeping it.

Not to say the book is without flaw. The mystery that develops therein has a predictable path, and we know whodunit relatively quickly. There are a few twists and turns, but nothing an avid mystery reader won't crack within a few pages after the introductions of the various clues along the way. That, however, in no way detracts from the book's readability.

If you're familiar with the Alan Gregory novels, but haven't read this one yet, do so at the earliest possible opportunity. If you're not familiar with Alan Gregory yet, what are you waiting for? ****

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: It's Nice to Meet You Dr. Gregory
Review: This is Stephen White's first Alan Gregory novel but for me, it was not the first one I read. I suppose you could say that unfortunately for me, it came after having read REMOTE CONTROL, HIGHER AUTHORITY AND PRIVATE PRACTICES. As I write this I am working on HARM's WAY. Let me just say that I have enjoyed all of these books and my main regret is that I did not read them in the order in which Mr. White wrote them. I think that if I had, I would have enjoyed them more.

Reading Privileged Information so out of sequence was somewhat unnerving because I already knew so much about Alan Gregory, Lauren Crowder and Sam Purdy so I did not get to enjoy meeting them for the first time in this book. However, that is a minor issue.

In this first book of the series, Alan Gregory, a Boulder, CO psychologist suspects one of his patients of murder and is almost ruined professionally (and financially) by the death of another, who implicates him in a sordid affair. This patient, who killed herself, had previously fixated on Alan Gregory but his problems are only beginning there.

In the year previously, Alan's wife left him, a patient died in a car wreck and his dog was hit by a car. He gets involved with Lauren Crowder and one of his patients actually follows them on their vacation to New Mexico.

Flash back to the present and Alan has to deal with the fact that he could be a murder suspect and faces a possible lawsuit from the dead girl's parents. He also wonders if he will lose his professional license. As I read all of this I found myself asking, "what did this poor guy ever do to deserve this...?"

I think this is an excellent starter in this series, especially for someone who has NEVER read any of the other books written by Mr. White since. This is the book that lays the foundation and provides the history and personal background for so much of what will happen later. The information provided in this story line is built upon (quite well, I might add) in the books that follow this one. This was an enjoyable read and I know that had I read this one first, instead of somewhere down the pike, I would have become a Stephen White fan right then and there.

One of the things I like about this book (and the rest of the series, too) is that White deals very effectively with some controversial topics. For example, Lauren Crowder has MS and when Alan meets her, she eventually introduces that into the dynamic of their relationship. She also has trouble trusting men because of a failed marriage.

In later books, White takes on the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (the Mormons) and that's a brave thing to do for a man who lives in a part of the country where they are a power unto themselves. (See Higher Authority). Stephen White writes the kind of book that I like to get into and he uses recurring characters we become familiar with and concerned about. In all of his works (this one included) he includes and builds on a level of tension that keeps the reader turning the pages. I felt that way with each of his books that I have read so far.

IF I can make one recommendation to readers who have NOT discovered this author, it would be this: read PRIVILEGED INFORMATION first. It was White's first novel and the one where he introduces many of the characters he will be using in later installments. Read this and the other White books in the order in which he wrote them and I don't think you'll be disappointed.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Stephen White: A Master Of The Thriller!
Review: This is the first of the "Alan Gregory" series by White. What a beginning! This book is chock full of fascinating characters and a plot that will keep you guessing long into the night (or early morning!).

White is especially effective at developing characters that are real and convincing, without the headliners being squeaky-clean perfect. All the characters have their flaws - like REAL people. I am tired of reading books where the "hero" has a picture perfect life. White's Alan Gregory character is superb.

One note that I think is important about the White books: If possible, read them in order of publication. "Privileged Information" is the first in the Gregory series and the others follow a natural progression and reading out of order may cause some confusion. Actually, it's a tribute to the well-woven character development by a true master of the thriller - Stephen White.


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