Amazon.com Rebecca Matlock is in the thick of politics, enjoying her work as a speechwriter for the governor of New York, who's facing a reelection campaign. What she's not enjoying are the menacing phone calls from a stranger who refers to himself as "your boyfriend" and warns her that he will kill the governor if she doesn't stop sleeping with him. Although Becca has never had a sexual relationship with her boss, she is increasingly frightened by the phone calls. The police, who were initially sympathetic to her plight, make it clear that they regard her as a hysteric, even after the stalker murders an innocent bystander to convince her that he means business. Becca seeks refuge in Riptide, an isolated community on the Maine coast, but terror continues to dog her. The skeleton of a woman who may be the missing wife of a college friend is unearthed in the basement of her new house; the stalker tracks her to her chosen refuge; and she is sought by the police and the FBI following an assassination attempt on the governor. With the appearance of Adam Carruthers, a stranger who says he's her guardian angel but doesn't tell her who sent him, the plot makes a dramatic right turn that requires a willing suspension of disbelief. It seems that Becca's father, a high-ranking intelligence officer, went underground when she was a baby in order to protect his family from reprisals by a Soviet agent whose wife he had accidentally killed. Now it's payback time, as Thomas Matlock calls in his own intelligence community to neutralize the threat on his daughter's life. All the attendant testosterone speeds up the action and propels it toward a shoot-'em-up conclusion, but it also sacrifices a clearer portrayal of Becca's feelings about her father's deception and abandonment. At the same time, the switch from a damsel-in-distress story to a high-velocity espionage thriller relegates the skeleton in Becca's basement to a secondary plot point that is resolved a bit too tidily. Catherine Coulter is short on character development and explication, but she weaves a suspenseful web of danger and intrigue, and for her many admirers, the fact that there seem to be two novels trying to coexist in one book may not be too much of a good thing. --Jane Adams From Publishers Weekly Trouble, in the form of psychopathic madmen, seems to follow political speechwriter Becca Matlock around like a personal storm cloud in bestselling historical romance (False Pretenses) and thriller (The Edge) author Coulter's newest suspense novel. When a stalker who calls himself Becca's "boyfriend" accuses her of sleeping with the governor and threatens to kill his perceived rival if she doesn't stop, Becca turns to New York's finest, but the cops repeatedly dismiss her. Worse, when the governor is shot, they assume she's responsible. With nowhere to turn, Becca retreats to coastal Riptide, Maine, a sleepy community that is also home to her college friend Tyler. But all is not peaceful there either. Tyler's wife apparently disappeared a while back, the locals think he killed her, and a skeleton falls out of the basement wall of Becca's rented house. Things get really out of hand when it looks as though Becca's problems can be traced to an axe-grinding former KGB agent. Although the book's setting shifts from New York City streets to rural New England, there is little atmospheric detail. The unsettling tone moves from NYPD Blue to Murder, She Wrote with creepy Cold War inflections. But convolution doesn't camouflage the fact that the heroine has more guts than brains, and the villains are ultimately silly rather than menacing. When Dillon and Sherlock Savich, FBI computer specialists from Coulter's The Maze, enter the plot, one gets the feeling that the gang's all here, but the hijinks remain untethered. Only diehard Coulter fans will want to tread water with this one. Doubleday Book Club main selection; 20-city author tour. (July) Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. See all Editorial Reviews
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坦白说,初读这本书时,我曾有些许的抗拒,因为它的语言风格乍一看之下显得有些晦涩和疏离,充满了大量我需要停下来查阅的专业术语和典故。但如果能坚持度过前期的适应期,你会发现这其实是一种精心设计的阅读体验。作者显然对世界观的构建投入了巨大的心血,每一个设定的背后似乎都有着一套严谨的逻辑体系,这种宏大而又精密的结构感,让人惊叹于作者的想象力和知识储备。它不是那种让你轻松消遣的读物,更像是一场智力上的挑战和沉浸式的学习过程。我喜欢它那种近乎冷峻的理性叙事,它很少用煽情的词藻去引导读者的情绪,而是将证据和事实摆在你面前,让你自己去构建情感的投射。这种叙事方式反而带来了一种更深层次的共鸣,因为它尊重了读者的思考能力。书中的配角群像也塑造得极其成功,即便是篇幅不多的角色,也因为其鲜明的特点和关键的作用,留下了不可磨灭的印象,他们共同编织了一张巨大而错综复杂的命运之网。
评分我通常不太偏爱这种带有强烈象征主义色彩的文学作品,但《Riptide》成功地将复杂的哲学思辨融入到极其引人入胜的情节之中,达到了商业性和艺术性的完美平衡。这本书最大的亮点在于其对“界限”的不断试探和跨越——物理的界限、道德的界限、语言的界限。作者仿佛在用一种解构主义的方式来审视我们习以为常的世界,通过设置一个略微扭曲的平行空间,来反观我们自己的现实。阅读过程充满了发现的乐趣,你会不断地在字里行间找到那些精妙的双关语和潜台词,每一次发现都像是获得了一个解开谜团的钥匙。它不像有些严肃文学那样高高在上,而是用一种非常平易近人的故事外壳,包裹着深刻的内核,使得即便是初次接触这类主题的读者也能轻松进入。这部小说展现了人类在面对未知和超越性力量时的渺小与挣扎,最终的落脚点又回归到了个体选择的重量上,是一部值得反复品读,每次都能发现新层次的佳作。
评分这是一部充满野性生命力的作品,它的文字如同未经驯化的河流,时而湍急汹涌,时而低回婉转。作者对于自然环境的描绘达到了出神入化的地步,你几乎能闻到泥土的芬芳和风中夹杂的潮湿气息。故事的核心冲突建立在人与人之间最原始的欲望和生存本能之上,没有太多复杂的道德说教,一切都回归到生存的本源——为了保护所爱,为了占据更多。这种直接的、近乎动物性的描写,反而显得无比真实和震撼。书中的对话极其精炼,充满了地方色彩和强烈的个人风格,有时候仅仅一个眼神的交流,或者一个未说出口的词语,就足以传递出山崩海啸般的情感信息。我欣赏作者那种毫不留情的真实性,它敢于撕开文明的遮羞布,展示人性中最原始的驱动力。读完整本书,感觉自己仿佛进行了一场长途的、艰苦的跋涉,虽然身心俱疲,但精神上却得到了极大的洗礼和释放,对生存的理解也提升到了一个新的维度。
评分这本书的叙事节奏简直就像一场突如其来的暴风雨,让人完全没有喘息的机会。作者对人物内心的刻画入木三分,那些细微的情绪波动,那些难以言喻的挣扎,都被捕捉得淋漓尽致。我尤其欣赏作者在描绘环境时所展现出的那种近乎诗意的笔触,无论是光影的变化,还是气味的变化,都仿佛能让你身临其境,感受到角色所处的真实氛围。情节的推进并非一蹴而就的线性发展,而是充满了精巧的伏笔和意想不到的反转,每一次看似偶然的事件背后,都隐藏着更深层次的联系。读到高潮部分时,我的心跳几乎要和书页的翻动同步了,那种紧张感和压迫感让人手心冒汗,真想放下书本透口气,但又忍不住想要立刻知道结局。最让我震撼的是,它探讨的并非是简单的善恶对立,而是人性的复杂与灰色地带,迫使读者反思自身,也让我对某些既定观念产生了动摇。这本书的后劲很足,合上书本后,那些人物的形象和他们所做的选择,还会久久地萦绕在脑海中,让人回味无穷,甚至会忍不住在日常生活中捕捉相似的影子。
评分这本书的魅力,很大程度上源于其对“缺失”的描摹。它没有用浓墨重彩去描绘那些宏大的胜利或史诗般的冲突,而是将镜头对准了那些被忽略、被遗忘的角落,那些因时代洪流而被碾压的个体命运。作者的文笔带着一种古典的庄重感,但叙事结构却是极其现代和跳跃的,时空交错之间,构建出一种宿命般的悲剧美学。我特别喜欢它对“记忆”的处理,记忆不再是线性的回顾,而是碎片化的、主观的、甚至带有欺骗性的,这让整个故事的真相变得扑朔迷离,读者必须成为一个主动的侦探,去拼凑那些残缺不全的画面。这种叙事手法虽然需要读者集中精力,但带来的回馈是巨大的——每当一个看似不相干的线索最终串联起来时,那种豁然开朗的满足感是无与伦比的。这本书深刻地探讨了时间对人的腐蚀作用,以及如何在残缺中寻找存在的意义,是那种读完后会让你沉思良久,甚至开始审视自己过往经历的作品。
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