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Hocus

Hocus

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

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of my favorite lifetime books
Review:

Never let it be said that a good mystery book can not have a fulfilling and captivating romance at its core because HOCUS will prove them wrong. Irene Kelly has an argument with her husband, policeman Frank Harriman, thinking they will make up when they return from work. Only problem with that scenario is Frank never comes home. It soon becomes evident that he has been taken hostage by unknown people for inexplicable reasons. While Irene worries, something totally out of character for her, she receives a phone call from the kidnappers who have the injured officer in their custody.

The two men holding Frank captive were victims of a childhood trauma, eye witnesses to the slaughters of their fathers. As adults they finally expect to exact their own brand of justice on the man responsible for the carnage. They don't know who he is except that he was a policeman in the town where Frank grew up and went to work as a detective. It is Irene's task to find out his identity and bring him to them in exchange for her spouse's freedom. Irene subdues her own controlling nature, out of her deep abiding love for her husband, and allows herself to be at the beck and call of the kidnappers knowing that if she fails to obey their orders, she will lose the only man she ever loved.

Readers of romance, mystery, suspense and thrillers will want to get their hands on HOCUS as quickly as possible. It is a deeply satisfying emotional read yet intellectually stimulating, prodding, and provoking the audience into trying to guess what will happen next. Jan Burke is a brilliant writer, a gifted storyteller who can hold her own with any writer in the genre, including Cornwell, Crichton and Rosenberg. If ever a book deserves an award, this one does, not only because of its popular appeal but because of a masterful plot execution.

Harriet Klausner

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Another Winner from Jan Burke
Review: Almost every professional reviewer puts Jan Burke in a box with other female mystery writers. We see her compared with Grafton, Cornwell, and Paretsky, etc. Well, enough of that! This "female mystery writer" can go toe to toe with the boys anytime. She proves it again with "Hocus". As with most of her other novels, Burke again uses the theme of tragedies in the past impacting on lives in the present. In this book Irene Kelly's husband, Frank, is taken hostage by two young men he had rescued ten years ago. Their fathers had been killed and they had been left to die in an abandoned warehouse. They believe that a corrupt policeman was involved and are using Frank as a bargaining tool to obtain his name. Burke creates sympathy for the two villians. We feel real pity for them because she has shown us how they became the damaged creatures they are now. Frank and Irene are very likeable characters simply because they seem like normal people. They have a loving marriage, two great dogs and a 20lb cat, wonderful friends and neighbors, and jobs they go to every day. This series just keeps getting better and better. Burke deserves to be compared with Robert Parker, Dennis Lehane, and Robert Crais. She definitely can play with the big boys.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Another Winner from Jan Burke
Review: Almost every professional reviewer puts Jan Burke in a box with other female mystery writers. We see her compared with Grafton, Cornwell, and Paretsky, etc. Well, enough of that! This "female mystery writer" can go toe to toe with the boys anytime. She proves it again with "Hocus". As with most of her other novels, Burke again uses the theme of tragedies in the past impacting on lives in the present. In this book Irene Kelly's husband, Frank, is taken hostage by two young men he had rescued ten years ago. Their fathers had been killed and they had been left to die in an abandoned warehouse. They believe that a corrupt policeman was involved and are using Frank as a bargaining tool to obtain his name. Burke creates sympathy for the two villians. We feel real pity for them because she has shown us how they became the damaged creatures they are now. Frank and Irene are very likeable characters simply because they seem like normal people. They have a loving marriage, two great dogs and a 20lb cat, wonderful friends and neighbors, and jobs they go to every day. This series just keeps getting better and better. Burke deserves to be compared with Robert Parker, Dennis Lehane, and Robert Crais. She definitely can play with the big boys.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Another Winner from Jan Burke
Review: Almost every professional reviewer puts Jan Burke in a box with other female mystery writers. We see her compared with Grafton, Cornwell, and Paretsky, etc. Well, enough of that! This "female mystery writer" can go toe to toe with the boys anytime. She proves it again with "Hocus". As with most of her other novels, Burke again uses the theme of tragedies in the past impacting on lives in the present. In this book Irene Kelly's husband, Frank, is taken hostage by two young men he had rescued ten years ago. Their fathers had been killed and they had been left to die in an abandoned warehouse. They believe that a corrupt policeman was involved and are using Frank as a bargaining tool to obtain his name. Burke creates sympathy for the two villians. We feel real pity for them because she has shown us how they became the damaged creatures they are now. Frank and Irene are very likeable characters simply because they seem like normal people. They have a loving marriage, two great dogs and a 20lb cat, wonderful friends and neighbors, and jobs they go to every day. This series just keeps getting better and better. Burke deserves to be compared with Robert Parker, Dennis Lehane, and Robert Crais. She definitely can play with the big boys.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Riveting, heart-wrenching
Review: Although I usually prefer the more hard-boiled writers such as Michael Connelly, Robert Crais, James Crumley, and Joe R. Lansdale, this book really packs a punch. Jan Burke has crafted an excellent plot that keeps you turning the pages well into the night. The love between Irene and Frank is very strongly portrayed, but the sympathetic story of the two "villains" is also very moving. Although there is no excusing their actions, you can't help but feel their pain, particularly that of Bret. This was my first "Irene" book; I can assure it won't be my last.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Jan's best book yet, a gifted writer in her prime!
Review: HOCUS is Jan's best book to date. Her main character, Irene Kelly, has gone beyond the two dimensions of Jan's words to a three dimensional heroine who you might find squeezing avocados next to you in the produce section of your local market. Jan's writing flows naturally along with the pacing of gifted story teller, yet carries the passion and intensity of an experience that must be passed on to as large an audience as possible. The clarity and understanding that Jan shows for the emotion of this story, painted deftly into the background of each page, are the strengths through out this enjoyable and rewarding book

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: If you don't like this book, you don't know how to read.
Review: Hocus is the best of the excellent Irene Kelly series. Each book in the series provides continuous humor and suspense, along with clever and interesting character and environment descriptions, and leaves the reader with the fulfillment that comes from having definitely done the right thing by setting aside the time to read. This book transcends previous works by Burke in its keen use of quick, yet smoothly coordinated sequences of place and time movement of the reader. Do yourself a favor and give this book a read. You will find the urgency of other things you had planned for the day to fade as you fall deeper into the pages of Hocus.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An extraordinary novel that hits a reader's emotions
Review: HOCUS, so far is one of the best books I've ever read. It is far superior to many mystery books because it draws the reader right into Irene and Frank's lives. Not only does the reader experiences Irene's pain of possibly becoming a widow, but the author was smart to include Frank's emotional and physical reactions to being so violently snatched against his will.

We also see pain through the guilty party, although their actions are not excused.

This book is one of my all time favorites also, because it is non stop action, conflict, suspense, and very deeply emotionally charged and believeable.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Hocus is Jan Burke's best so far
Review: I found Goodnight Irene in remainders and found it and the following 3 to be pleasant light reading. However with Hocus, Burke has moved up the ladder. Hocus is a fascinating and heart wrenching book. Irene almost always holds onto her famous temper. Cassidy is an interesting character, and the story falls into "no sleep until finished" category.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Extremely different plot for a mystery!
Review: I had not realized that I have read Burke before. This book made a much larger impact on me then the last book of hers that I read. I will definitely remember her name and look for her books when I go to read an intelligent mystery. This particular plot is so intricately woven and has little gems of insight into the writings of Bret Harte, California, and the psychological impact of trauma on children and speech as to make it a wonderful read. I always enjoy it when authors take the time to do research into the basis of their story and Burke did a great job in incorporating all the facets into a sensible whole.

Burke's protagonist is different in that not only does she work in a newspaper, but she is also married. I rarely come across American writers who have married protagonists...makes you wonder if they think married women cannot possibly have interesting lives. Burke shows that this is not true, and makes her characters believeable. A totally enjoyable read. Karen Sadler,

Science Education, University of Pittsburgh


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