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A Blind Eye : A Novel

A Blind Eye : A Novel

List Price: $6.99
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: On the trail of a twisted killer.
Review: "A Blind Eye," by G. M. Ford, features the tough and taciturn Frank Corso, a true crime writer who is on the lam. Corso is wanted in Texas as a material witness, and he decides to lie low until the warrant for his arrest expires. Along with his former lover, photojournalist Meg Dougherty, Frank gets into an accident on a Wisconsin highway during a heavy blizzard. When Dougherty and Corso take shelter in an abandoned house, they discover the grisly remains of a murdered family.

Corso is manipulated by the local sheriff into investigating this crime, which leads him to several states in his pursuit of a very unusual serial killer. "A Blind Eye" explores the pathological side of human nature, especially the way in which horribly abused children sometimes grow into deeply disturbed and violent adults.

Corso is a terrific character. He is strong, courageous, and eerily intuitive, and his girlfriend, Meg Dougherty, is gutsy and tenacious. The secondary characters are also well-drawn. G. M. Ford's plot is intricate and engrossing, and he ratchets up the tension to an agonizing level prior to the hair-raising and electrifying finale. "A Blind Eye" is a powerful and unsettling thriller that may give you nightmares.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: On the trail of a twisted killer.
Review: "A Blind Eye," by G. M. Ford, features the tough and taciturn Frank Corso, a true crime writer who is on the lam. Corso is wanted in Texas as a material witness, and he decides to lie low until the warrant for his arrest expires. Along with his former lover, photojournalist Meg Dougherty, Frank gets into an accident on a Wisconsin highway during a heavy blizzard. When Dougherty and Corso take shelter in an abandoned house, they discover the grisly remains of a murdered family.

Corso is manipulated by the local sheriff into investigating this crime, which leads him to several states in his pursuit of a very unusual serial killer. "A Blind Eye" explores the pathological side of human nature, especially the way in which horribly abused children sometimes grow into deeply disturbed and violent adults.

Corso is a terrific character. He is strong, courageous, and eerily intuitive, and his girlfriend, Meg Dougherty, is gutsy and tenacious. The secondary characters are also well-drawn. G. M. Ford's plot is intricate and engrossing, and he ratchets up the tension to an agonizing level prior to the hair-raising and electrifying finale. "A Blind Eye" is a powerful and unsettling thriller that may give you nightmares.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Don't turn A Blind Eye to this gripping mystery
Review: A Blind Eye is G.M. Ford's third book featuring Frank Corso, a disgraced New York Times reporter turned best-selling author of true-crime novels. (Maybe that's a career Jayson Blair should consider.)

As the book opens, Corso and his assistant (and former lover), Meg Dougherty, are on the lam, hiding from a Texas grand jury that wants to ask Corso questions he doesn't have good answers for. In their effort to escape, the pair winds up in a remote location in snowy Wisconsin, where they stumble upon a grisly crime scene.

That discovery leads them onto the trail of a twisted serial killer who preys on entire families, including her own. Don't worry, though; this isn't another lame, exploitive manic-killer book that uses its crimes to titillate. Ford is too classy an author for that. True, the villain is one sick woman, but she's largely in the background while the focus of the story is on Corso.

A Blind Eye is an excellent example of a well written crime novel that tells a straightforward, interesting story without pretensions or cliche. At times it goes off in unnecessary directions (like the killing of a deputy that made no sense at all), but that weakness is a minor one. The gripping suspense and stunning climax make this book well worthwhile.

Reviewed by David Montgomery, Chicago Sun-Times

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Exciting action--very well written
Review: All he has to do is stay away from the Texas Rangers for a few more days--until the Grand Jury term expires and he can go home. But a freak snowstorm strands writer Frank Corso, along with sometime-girlfriend and photographer Meg Dougherty in an airport and Frank decides to brave the blizzard rather than wait to be arrested. Stuck in the blizzard, Frank and Meg discover evidence of a seventeen-year-old murder. As part of a bargain to keep him away from the Rangers, Frank agrees to look into the old murder and Meg reluctantly goes along.

What they find is a story of abuse, incest, and a girl's attempts to control her environment at any cost. As they get closer, they wonder whether this girl, now a woman, might kill again--and whether they can stay alive themselves. Of course, getting closer depends on staying ahead of the Rangers, the FBI, and the local Sheriff who has her own issues.
Author G. M. Ford writes a page-turning and compelling story. Frank, with his little problem with the truth, makes an intriguing character--bad enough to be sympathetic but heroic enough to make him admirable as well. Ford's writing grabs the reader by the throat and pulls them through an exciting adventure.

Readers who enjoy action, a bit of psychological analysis, wise-talking heros, and a quirky bit of romance will definitely want to get their hands on A BLIND EYE.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Still a Fan
Review: At the opposite end of the spectrum from lightweight Robert B. Parker type work is author G. M. Ford. First with the Leo Waterman series and now with the Frank Corso series, his novels consistently feature multidimensional characters, complicated plots and intense writing. This is the third novel in the Frank Corso series and is simply an intense spellbinding read that occasionally is highly disturbing in its background themes of death and child abuse. If you haven't read him before, you really need to read FURY and Black River before you read this one as they lay the foundation for the Corso character.

As the novel opens, Corso and his good friend Meg Dougherty are stuck at Chicago's O'Hare Airport thanks to a blizzard. The blizzard rages outside while a very frustrated Corso rages within which is not a good thing in this day of terror alerts and increased security concerns at the nation's airports. Being a disgruntled angry passenger has consequences these days and he can't afford them. Corso needs to leave as there is a warrant out for his arrest and his warrant has now caught the attention of the cable news outlets.

A Grand Jury in Texas issued the arrest warrant because in his latest true crime book, author Frank Corso claimed to know where a body in Texas was buried. Unfortunately, his source that told him that he knew has now vanished so Corso has nothing to tell the Grand Jury. If the Texas Rangers find and arrest him, he can be held indefinitely on a "material witness" charge. But if he can remain uncaught for a little more than a week, the Grand Jury will dissolve and with no Grand Jury, the warrant for his arrest will become void and unenforceable. Then he can go back home to Seattle and let his attorney handle it without fear of arrest.

In the meantime, with his picture popping up every few minutes on various cable stations on airport televisions, it is past time to leave. Since planes are out of the question, Corso and Dougherty rent an SUV and venture out into the blizzard. That small acts sets in motion a nightmarish discovery of the legacy of a very sick serial killer, a man hunt involving the FBI as well as other law enforcement types, crooked cops, and a string of bodies and destruction in their wake.

This novel is extremely intense and occasionally disturbingly graphic in depictions of death and child abuse. More of the Corso character is revealed as well as his good friend Meg Dougherty. However, the author never lets the character development get in the way of the intense, griping story. This is a real page tuner that will get your blood pounding as the book works toward one heck of an ending. While I much prefer the Leo Waterman character, the intense and complex enigma of Frank Corso is fast becoming a real
favorite.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Chilling thriller!
Review: G.M. Ford's third Frank Corso novel, "A Blind Eye" is an intense, dark, fast paced mystery thriller.

Two Texas marshals have a material witness warrant that Corso (a true crime writer) is eager to avoid.

On the lam with his amazonish photojournalist, Meg Dougherty---a blinding snowstorm drives them to an abandoned Wisconsin farmhouse for shelter. Buried in shed, they discover the skeletons of the Holmes family---murdered fifteen years ago.

The small town sheriff makes a deal with Corso. He investigates this coldest of cases---she misleads the Texas marshals.

The harrowing search for the family serial killer leads to Pennsylvania, the Ramapo Mountains of New Jersey and Michigan.

The journey to uncover the elusive and shadowy criminals is fascinating and filled with brilliant surprises.

The supporting cast---an isolated, inbred group known as the White Jacksons, the Texas marshals, the sheriff and the surprisingly cooperative New Jersey FBI SAIC---is strong and inventive.

The wisecracking Corso is positively enigmatic, with his own sense of honor---always striving to unearth the truth, no matter the roadblocks.

The ending is absolutely chilling.

A willing suspension of disbelief is the perfect supplement to Mr. Ford's agile plot and tough situation resolutions.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: American Gothic
Review: In an opening sequence as fast-paced and frantic as the prologue to an Indiana Jones movie, true crime writer Frank Corso (trying to avoid appearing before a Grand Jury in Texas as a material witness) and his ex-lover Megan Dougherty drive from snowbound O'Hare airport in the hope of catching a plane from Madison... but they skid on an icy road and take shelter in a long-abandoned farmhouse. Tearing up some floorboards for firewood, they find several buried bodies. The Texans catch up with Corso while he's recovering from the crash in hospital in the small town of Avalon, and Corso makes a deal with the local sheriff: if he solves the murder and helps her win re-election, she'll fight the extradition order for a few days until the Grand Jury case is over.

Corso soon becomes intrigued by the case, then horrified, and continues working to solve it even after the sheriff's deputy is found dead and he's accused of the murder.

Apart from a rather contrived beginning, A Blind Eye is an excellently crafted fast-paced thriller which builds up to a gripping climax, comparable to Red Dragon or The Silence of the Lambs. Ford makes good use of forensic science (including some rather gruesome details of forensic entomology) as well Corso and Dougherty's knack for extracting the information they need from people and computers, and cunningly weaves in some clues that even Corso misses. There's plenty of action as Corso tries to elude everyone who's trying to catch or kill him, and more than a hint of sexual tension, though most of the sex happens off-stage (if not necessarily off-camera).

Ford is also skilled at creating interesting, often surprising, characters in remarkably few words. His good guys have flaws, and it's difficult not to empathise (at least a little) with his killers as well as most of their victims. His dialogue is sharp, but believable. And like Stephen King or Bruce Springsteen, Ford does an excellent job of portraying slowly-dying rust-belt Smalltown USA, where the cemetery is not only all that remains of an area's history but the closest thing it has to a claim on the future.

Though grim to the point of being gothic, A Blind Eye is a genuinely gripping read that should appeal to all thriller, mystery and horror enthusiasts.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Snowblind and snowjobbed
Review: Setting your mysteries in Seattle (one of my favourite cities) is not the way to keep me as a reader, but it will certainly help get me started. Thankfully, G.M. Ford has a way with writing that will always keep me around. His Leo Waterman mysteries were first-rate, and his Frank Corso books have kept his string of winning novels alive. A Blind Eye continues this, as Ford creates a page-turner that will keep any hard-boiled detective fan glued to the text.

True Crime author and disgraced newspaper reporter Frank Corso is having a bad day. He's stuck in Chicago's O'Hare airport, snowed in and stranded, with an irate Meg Dougherty (former lover and one real friend) along for the ride. Why is Meg irate? Because Frank never bothered to tell her that the reason for the "story" they are pursuing is really because two Texas rangers have a warrant for his arrest. Stuck in an airport, his picture showing up on CNN and security starting to look at him strangely, Corso drags Meg on an ill-considered car ride into Wisconsin, where icy roads send them to the bottom of a ravine. What they discover there will bring more than just Texas law enforcement down on his head. It will involve them in a cross-country trip on the trail of a serial killer uncaught for over 30 years. It also, of course, makes him a target.

A Blind Eye takes Corso out of his familiar Seattle, and I think it stretched Ford's writing talent as well. Seattle and western Washington has always been a cozy location for him in which to write, with familiar territory and landmarks making identification easier. This one starts out in Chicago, goes to southern Wisconsin, Iowa, Pennsylvania, and the wilds of the New Jersey mountains. Removed from his familiar environs, Ford has to work a little bit harder, and he does a great job. Some of it is a bit stereotypical (I'm from Iowa, and he captures it decently, but not wonderfully), but overall it shows that he did some research on his locales. Removing Corso and Dougherty from the northwest also allows him to broaden their characters as well. Seeing them on the run presents a different side of them, how they react when desperation hits. Usually, we see our heroes chasing the bad guys, not the other way around.

The relationship between Dougherty and Corso crackles with energy. They used to be lovers and have now become the best of friends. Dougherty is extremely annoyed with Corso, but she goes along with him anyway. She obviously still loves him to put up with all that he puts her through. In fact, their relationship goes through an even more pronounced change in A Blind Eye, evolving as they are forced together by circumstances. That's one thing I love about Ford's writing: the characters are always open to change and growth. While it certainly is not necessary to read the books in order, things change enough that you are rewarded for doing so. This makes both of them even deeper characters then most genre detectives.

The minor characters are given just enough depth to be believable while not overshadowing the protagonists. The sheriff of the Wisconsin town is predictably overwhelmed by having all of the media attention centered on her, along with a gloryhound deputy who's gunning for her job. This situation actually ends up being important, driving some of the action despite the fact that it's not center-stage. This is a bit distracting from the main plot, but it's not critical. Most of the rest get little, if any, development, but their suitably quirky and/or malevolent to serve their roles. The one exception to this isn't obvious until the end, however. In between some of the chapters are entries from a journal whose author is unrevealed. As the book goes on, it becomes clearer and actually adds to the horror of what is happening, as we realize that the cycle of violence may not be ending like we thought it would.

There are only a couple of faults with this book. The first is the fact that there are some superfluous scenes in the book that seem to be included just to show us how tough Corso is. Regular readers already know how tough he is, and subsequent events in the book show this to new readers. Unless Ford is just trying to show us what our rights are during a traffic stop, I see no point to them. While this is forgivable, the second problem is far more damning.

The book posits the existence of a super-secret organization that journalists and others can use to get information that is otherwise unobtainable (at least in a timely manner). This organization is so secret that they will not accept any new queries from a phone number they don't have on file, and any such calls require that the phone be disposed of as soon as the call is completed. The presentation of this organization screams PLOT DEVELOPMENT every time Corso uses it, bringing me out of the narrative. It results in a couple of funny scenes (especially when Corso has to use Meg's phone for a question), but overall it's just distracting.

Overall, A Blind Eye is a wonderful page-turner. It's not a taxing read, in fact it's perfect for Sunday afternoons or beach reading. If you like your mysteries with great characters who grow and change, the Frank Corso books are definitely for you. You don't even have very many to catch up on. Whatever you do, though, check this one out.

David Roy

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Snowblind and snowjobbed
Review: Setting your mysteries in Seattle (one of my favourite cities) is not the way to keep me as a reader, but it will certainly help get me started. Thankfully, G.M. Ford has a way with writing that will always keep me around. His Leo Waterman mysteries were first-rate, and his Frank Corso books have kept his string of winning novels alive. A Blind Eye continues this, as Ford creates a page-turner that will keep any hard-boiled detective fan glued to the text.

True Crime author and disgraced newspaper reporter Frank Corso is having a bad day. He's stuck in Chicago's O'Hare airport, snowed in and stranded, with an irate Meg Dougherty (former lover and one real friend) along for the ride. Why is Meg irate? Because Frank never bothered to tell her that the reason for the "story" they are pursuing is really because two Texas rangers have a warrant for his arrest. Stuck in an airport, his picture showing up on CNN and security starting to look at him strangely, Corso drags Meg on an ill-considered car ride into Wisconsin, where icy roads send them to the bottom of a ravine. What they discover there will bring more than just Texas law enforcement down on his head. It will involve them in a cross-country trip on the trail of a serial killer uncaught for over 30 years. It also, of course, makes him a target.

A Blind Eye takes Corso out of his familiar Seattle, and I think it stretched Ford's writing talent as well. Seattle and western Washington has always been a cozy location for him in which to write, with familiar territory and landmarks making identification easier. This one starts out in Chicago, goes to southern Wisconsin, Iowa, Pennsylvania, and the wilds of the New Jersey mountains. Removed from his familiar environs, Ford has to work a little bit harder, and he does a great job. Some of it is a bit stereotypical (I'm from Iowa, and he captures it decently, but not wonderfully), but overall it shows that he did some research on his locales. Removing Corso and Dougherty from the northwest also allows him to broaden their characters as well. Seeing them on the run presents a different side of them, how they react when desperation hits. Usually, we see our heroes chasing the bad guys, not the other way around.

The relationship between Dougherty and Corso crackles with energy. They used to be lovers and have now become the best of friends. Dougherty is extremely annoyed with Corso, but she goes along with him anyway. She obviously still loves him to put up with all that he puts her through. In fact, their relationship goes through an even more pronounced change in A Blind Eye, evolving as they are forced together by circumstances. That's one thing I love about Ford's writing: the characters are always open to change and growth. While it certainly is not necessary to read the books in order, things change enough that you are rewarded for doing so. This makes both of them even deeper characters then most genre detectives.

The minor characters are given just enough depth to be believable while not overshadowing the protagonists. The sheriff of the Wisconsin town is predictably overwhelmed by having all of the media attention centered on her, along with a gloryhound deputy who's gunning for her job. This situation actually ends up being important, driving some of the action despite the fact that it's not center-stage. This is a bit distracting from the main plot, but it's not critical. Most of the rest get little, if any, development, but their suitably quirky and/or malevolent to serve their roles. The one exception to this isn't obvious until the end, however. In between some of the chapters are entries from a journal whose author is unrevealed. As the book goes on, it becomes clearer and actually adds to the horror of what is happening, as we realize that the cycle of violence may not be ending like we thought it would.

There are only a couple of faults with this book. The first is the fact that there are some superfluous scenes in the book that seem to be included just to show us how tough Corso is. Regular readers already know how tough he is, and subsequent events in the book show this to new readers. Unless Ford is just trying to show us what our rights are during a traffic stop, I see no point to them. While this is forgivable, the second problem is far more damning.

The book posits the existence of a super-secret organization that journalists and others can use to get information that is otherwise unobtainable (at least in a timely manner). This organization is so secret that they will not accept any new queries from a phone number they don't have on file, and any such calls require that the phone be disposed of as soon as the call is completed. The presentation of this organization screams PLOT DEVELOPMENT every time Corso uses it, bringing me out of the narrative. It results in a couple of funny scenes (especially when Corso has to use Meg's phone for a question), but overall it's just distracting.

Overall, A Blind Eye is a wonderful page-turner. It's not a taxing read, in fact it's perfect for Sunday afternoons or beach reading. If you like your mysteries with great characters who grow and change, the Frank Corso books are definitely for you. You don't even have very many to catch up on. Whatever you do, though, check this one out.

David Roy


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