Blowout

Unabridged
Author: Catherine Coulter
Narrator: Sandra Burr
Genres: Fiction, Mystery, Thriller, Thriller
Publisher: Brilliance Audio
Date: January 2005
Length: 11 hours
Ratings:
Formats:
  • CD

Overview

FBI agents Dillon Savich and Lacey Sherlock return in a dazzling new thriller. Blowout takes excitement to an all-time high level.

Married FBI agents Savich and Sherlock work and play hard: devoted to their jobs, their son, and each other, they approach each new case with gusto, and appreciate every moment of downtime they can grab. But a long weekend getaway at a secluded cabin in the Pennsylvania woods is cut short when the agents are summoned back to Washington, where a nightmare awaits them: The night before the Supreme Court is to hear opening arguments in a highly controversial death-penalty case, a prominent judge is murdered in the court's third-floor library. Savich and Sherlock are charged with heading the investigation but when the killings continue, each targeting another brilliant, successful Washington power broker, the agents are faced with their most baffling and shocking case of their lives.

Reviews (8)

similar to other Coulter FBI books

Written by Anonymous from Southbury, CT on July 24th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 3/5

The book is similar to other Coulter FBI books - a little heavy on conversation and not action.

blow out

Written by Anonymous on June 11th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 5/5

this book kept you going. i usually listen to the cd's when i am traveling. i caught myself when i got to my destination just continuing to listen to this book in my car. it was hard to stop listening.

Blowout

Written by Kville on February 6th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 2/5

The plot is kind of interesting, but moves pretty slowly through endless interviews by the investigators. Halfway through the book, you have no clue where it may be going. I thought the reader was pretty bad. When using her normal speaking voice (for background stuff) she is fine. But all the men's voices are reminiscent of Donald Duck, and the women all sound like they are 12 years old. It is actually distracting at times.

Blowout by Catherine Coulter

Written by Bobbi from Fallbrook, CA on August 3rd, 2006

  • Book Rating: 4/5

This one kept me guessing and boy was I wrong as to who dunnit and why. A little slow in some parts but overall the story was good.

Blowout

Written by Anonymous on February 2nd, 2006

  • Book Rating: 1/5

Very long winded, with more fill than necessary. The story line about the woman appearing in the woods is not realted to the primary story line in any way and doesn't seem to belong in this book. There is way to much detail on the mundane functioning of the supreme court. The ending is also completely out of sync with how the plot played out. I found it to be a disappointment from start to finish.

Blow Out

Written by Brandi on November 10th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 3/5

Though the story could get a little slow it was interesting. The story had a few different directions it was going in, but was good. The reader did a great job with all the characters.

Rent an abridged version

Written by Anonymous on August 17th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 2/5

Coulter's interesting storyline is ruined by unrealistic dialogue.

Too slow... not enough passion..

Written by Anonymous on April 22nd, 2005

  • Book Rating: 3/5

Pretty good. It gets a little slow. She always has more than one story going on in her books and I don't like that.

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]