Blindside

Unabridged
Author: Catherine Coulter
Narrator: Sandra Burr
Genres: Romance, Fiction, Mystery, Thriller
Publisher: Brilliance Audio
Date: July 2003
Length: 10 hours
Ratings:
Formats:
  • CD

Overview

Catherine Coulter’s fast-paced FBI novels featuring married agents Lacey Sherlock and Dillon Savich have rocketed up the New York Times bestseller lists and garnered millions of fans. Coulter’s heady blend of action and intrigue, her "complex plotting and likable characters" (Publishers Weekly), grow more intoxicating with each book — and reach new heights in Blindside. When six-year-old Sam Kettering is kidnapped and then manages to save himself, Savich and Sherlock join his father—former FBI agent Miles Kettering —to determine why Sam would be abducted and brought to eastern Tennessee. Though the local sheriff, Katie Benedict, catches up with Sam before the kidnappers do, the case isn’t over —not by a long shot. The unanswered question is: Why do the kidnappers want this little boy so badly? The investigation leads Savich and Sherlock to a charismatic, intense evangelist, Reverend Sooner McCamy, and his enigmatic wife. As if the kidnapping case weren’t enough, Savich and Sherlock are at the same time desperate to locate the killer of three teachers in Washington, D.C.

Reviews (7)

Blind Side

Written by Anonymous on September 20th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 1/5

This book was very poorly written. Right from the beginning when I heard the names of the characters I knew it was not one of her best. I mean, come on, a character that is referred to as "Fatso" with repeated descriptions of his big stomach, means nothing to the story. Then another character is described on and on about his weight and triple chins, etc. Words and phrases are often repeated and it just did not make for good listening. In the very beginning, the phrase "two dead math teachers" was repeated so often it drove me nuts. It is almost as if someone else wrote the book for Catherine Coulter. If this was the first Cathrine Coulter book I read I would not be inclined to read another.

Blindside

Written by Kay on May 31st, 2007

  • Book Rating: 5/5

Wonderful read. Really interesting twists and turns. Coulter is a great author!

blind sided

Written by Lee Werley from Chapel Hill, NC on May 25th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 3/5

It was too long and I had to wait 7 weeks between the first mailing and the second. I had questions about the story that were not fully answered. The reading was okay.

Blind Side

Written by Daparoye from Orange, CA on October 13th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 2/5

This book is just below average. It was a bit "messy" in that it had many story lines involving the main characters and everything was all tied up neat at the end .... but did it make sense? NO. Did it really answer all the questions? NO. Do you really care by the end of the book? NO. I did finish it and was happy to move on to more interesting tales.

Blindside

Written by Anonymous from Landolakes, FL on June 15th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 2/5

It was written like a childrens story book. Did not keep us interested or entertained.

Blindside

Written by Anonymous on April 5th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 5/5

I thought the book was very good. I enjoyed watching the relationship between the kidnapped boy and young girl grow.

Blindside

Written by Paul from South Deerfield, MA on December 12th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 3/5

This is a very average sort of mystery. It involves a kidnapping, the FBI, romantic relationship. The major mystery is why the boy was kidnapped. This is never entirely resolved in my thinking. It is answered, but does not make much sense to me. Lengthy and somewhat engaging.

Author Details

Author Details

Coulter, Catherine

Coulter grew up on a horse ranch in the state of Texas.[2] She comes from a family of creative people. Her grandmother, who died at the young age of 37, was also a writer. Coulter's father is a painter and singer, and her mother is a retired concert pianist.[3]

Coulter wrote her first two novels, fifteen pages each, when she was fourteen.[3] While a freshman at University of Texas, Coulter wrote poetry.[3] After earning her undergraduate degree from the University of Texas, Coulter attended Boston College and earned a Master's degree in early 19th century European history.[2]

Coulter took a job as a speech writer for a Wall Street company president. Because her husband was a medical student, she spent many of her evenings alone, reading romance novels. One night when they were home together, Coulter found herself in the middle of a particularly bad book and threw it across room, asserting that even she could do better. Her husband challenged her to prove herself, and the two spent the weekend plotting out a storyline for a gothic romance. Coulter wrote the novel in the evenings.[3]

When Coulter finished writing her novel she sent it to an editor at Signet, the premiere Regency romance publisher. Three days later Signet offered her a three-book contract.[3] That first novel, The Autumn Countess, was published by Penguin Books in 1978. By 1982, she was earning enough to quit her job and become a full-time writer.[4]

Since then she has written over fifty books and has had forty-two consecutive New York Times Bestsellers since 1988.[2] Her thriller The Maze was her first book to place on the New York Times Hardcover Bestseller list, while The Cove spent nine weeks on the New York Times Paperback Bestseller list and sold over one million copies.[2] Coulter generally publishes one historical romance and one suspense novel each year, and has been busily rewriting many of her earlier Regency romances to turn them into longer historical romances.[5]

Coulter sits down to her computer every morning at 6:30 a.m. to review her email before beginning writing at 7:30 a.m. She normally finishes writing by 11 a.m.[3]

Coulter lives in Marin County, California with her husband, Anton Pogany, who is a physician. They travel often, and Coulter loves to ski.[2]