Home :: Books :: Literature & Fiction  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction

Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Break and Enter

Break and Enter

List Price: $6.99
Your Price: $6.29
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Sticking Pins In Dolls
Review: Devotees of Voodoo will be happy to note that Colin Harrison's new novel once again brings us a protagonist whom the author slowly destroys. Mr. Harrison uses up a whole quiver of needles while sticking them in his character of Peter Scattergood. Peter's an upstanding, decent assistant district attorney who is assigned a case involving the murder of the mayor's nephew. Peter investigates the murder, and comes up with more leads than the police. Is the criminal investigation the main plot of the story? Perhaps not. Peter's wife has left him and he is disconsolate; he needs to win her back. He tries unsuccessfully to mend the relationship, and, to our dismay, turns into a stalker. What a paradox as his legal ethics begin conflicting with the unethical behavior in his personal life. He becomes seriously deluded in his belief that his marriage will be saved.

Colin Harrison frequently presents us with extremely fallible humans. They tend to persist in following a bad turn along one of life's roads. Reason falls victim to rationalization. You want to slap Peter Scattergood in the face, and hear him say, "Thanks, I needed that." So once again we have a Harrison novel in which it is hard to identify with those who live in its pages. For those who do like CH, however, this is another rewarding read.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Captivating Legal Thriller
Review: I was spell bound by Colin Harrison's excellent legal thriller right up to the final few chapters. Harrison weaves a clever tale around the central character, Peter Scattergood, an assistant District Attorney in the Philadelphia District Attorney's office. As the story begins, Scattergood is on the verge of completing another successful prosecution in a case of sexual assault and murder. He is about to take on a high profile prosecution following the murder of the nephew of the city's black mayor. His assignment to this case is the result of self interested political motivation by both his boss, the DA, and the mayor himself. Scattergood is in a lose-lose situation with his natural support mechanism, the police investigators, being in the pocket of the DA.

That Scattergood's wife walks out on him at this very time makes his life almost unbelievably challenging. His own parents seem to have more sympathy for his wife than for him. He is almost penniless too with heavy financial commitments leaving him with virtually no discretionary disposable income. Far from bringing any relief into his desperate situation, a casual and very sexual affair, only adds to his unhappiness and causes his guilty conscience to work overtime. He desperately loves his wife and would do almost anything, legal or illegal, to have her return to him.

At the stage where only a few pages of the book remained to be turned, I was concerned that all the loose ends in the tale couldn't be neatly tied up. Were my concerns real or unfounded? You will have to read the book for yourself and find out. It is an excellent story and easy to read.

I was surprised to find that this may be the only book which Colin Harrison has written. I have read reviews of "Afterburn", "Bodies Electric" and "Manhattan Nocturne" written by Colin Harrison, but it seems that may have been another author with the same name. There was no link or reference to "Break And Enter". My research is clearly not yet complete.

It is always a pleasure to discover a new author and be able to look forward to the promise of reading all his/her other books. Colin, if it wasn't you who wrote those three other books please pick up your pen, or fire up your lap top and start on another novel.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Captivating Legal Thriller
Review: I was spell bound by Colin Harrison's excellent legal thriller right up to the final few chapters. Harrison weaves a clever tale around the central character, Peter Scattergood, an assistant District Attorney in the Philadelphia District Attorney's office. As the story begins, Scattergood is on the verge of completing another successful prosecution in a case of sexual assault and murder. He is about to take on a high profile prosecution following the murder of the nephew of the city's black mayor. His assignment to this case is the result of self interested political motivation by both his boss, the DA, and the mayor himself. Scattergood is in a lose-lose situation with his natural support mechanism, the police investigators, being in the pocket of the DA.

That Scattergood's wife walks out on him at this very time makes his life almost unbelievably challenging. His own parents seem to have more sympathy for his wife than for him. He is almost penniless too with heavy financial commitments leaving him with virtually no discretionary disposable income. Far from bringing any relief into his desperate situation, a casual and very sexual affair, only adds to his unhappiness and causes his guilty conscience to work overtime. He desperately loves his wife and would do almost anything, legal or illegal, to have her return to him.

At the stage where only a few pages of the book remained to be turned, I was concerned that all the loose ends in the tale couldn't be neatly tied up. Were my concerns real or unfounded? You will have to read the book for yourself and find out. It is an excellent story and easy to read.

I was surprised to find that this may be the only book which Colin Harrison has written. I have read reviews of "Afterburn", "Bodies Electric" and "Manhattan Nocturne" written by Colin Harrison, but it seems that may have been another author with the same name. There was no link or reference to "Break And Enter". My research is clearly not yet complete.

It is always a pleasure to discover a new author and be able to look forward to the promise of reading all his/her other books. Colin, if it wasn't you who wrote those three other books please pick up your pen, or fire up your lap top and start on another novel.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A good book with a mediocre ending
Review: I've read all but one of Colin Harrison's books. I love his blunt style, and I usually have a hard time putting the them down once I've started reading. I've often started reading, expecting to stop after 1/2 and hour, only to look up at the clock and realized its been well over an hour.

However, that being said, these books have all been ruined by a mediocre ending that leaves you saying, "Well, that was certainly anti-climactic."

Was it bad enough to put me off his other writing? Not at all. It didn't stop me from buying all of his books. It's just a small quibble.


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates