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Blind Fall: A Novel [Audiobook, Unabridged] [Audio CD]

Christopher Rice (Author), Frederick Weller (Reader)
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (51 customer reviews)


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Book Description

March 11, 2008
From three-time New York Times bestselling author Christopher Rice -- whose novels have been called "bold and ambitious" by The New York Times, "chillingly perverse" by USA Today, and "shocking, sexy...intricate" by Glamour -- comes this startling psychological thriller about an Iraq War vet who seeks redemption and revenge when a fellow Marine he failed to protect during the war is brutally murdered.

John Houck became a Marine to become a hero. But his life changed when he failed to notice an explosive device that ended up maiming the captain of his Force Recon Company, a respected Marine who nearly sacrificed himself to save John's life.

Home from Iraq, John pays a visit to his former captain, only to discover the captain has been gruesomely murdered. John pursues a strange man he sees running from the scene, but he discovers that Alex Martin is not the murderer. Alex is, in fact, the former captain's secret male lover and the killer's intended next victim.

When it becomes clear that local law enforcement has direct connections to the murder itself, John realizes that to repay his debt of honor, he must teach Alex Martin how to protect himself, even if that means teaching Alex to kill. In the process, John confronts the painful truth about the younger brother he was unable to protect and the older sister he always felt he failed.

Blind Fall is a story of honor and integrity, of turning failure into victory. It is a stunning departure for Christopher Rice: the story of two men, one a Marine, one gay, who must unite to avenge the death of the man they both loved -- one as a brother-in-arms, one as a lover -- and to survive.

--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

From three-time New York Times bestselling author Christopher Rice--whose novels have been called "bold and ambitious" by The New York Times, "chillingly perverse" by USA Today, and "shocking, sexy...intricate" by Glamour--comes this startling psychological thriller about an Iraq War vet who seeks redemption and revenge when a fellow Marine he failed to protect during the war is brutally murdered.

John Houck became a Marine to become a hero. But his life changed when he failed to notice an explosive device that ended up maiming the captain of his Force Recon Company, a respected Marine who nearly sacrificed himself to save John's life.

Home from Iraq, John pays a visit to his former captain, only to discover the captain has been gruesomely murdered. John pursues a strange man he sees running from the scene, but he discovers that Alex Martin is not the murderer. Alex is, in fact, the former captain's secret male lover and the killer's intended next victim.

When it becomes clear that local law enforcement has direct connections to the murder itself, John realizes that to repay his debt of honor, he must teach Alex Martin how to protect himself, even if that means teaching Alex to kill. In the process, John confronts the painful truth about the younger brother he was unable to protect and the older sister he always felt he failed.

Blind Fall is a story of honor and integrity, of turning failure into victory. It is a stunning departure for Christopher Rice: the story of two men, one a Marine, one gay, who must unite to avenge the death of the man they both loved--one as a brother-in-arms, one as a lover--and to survive.



Amazon.com Exclusive
A Letter from Christopher Rice

Dear Amazon.com Reader,

Authors hate answering the question "what is your book about?" because deep down most of us are arrogant enough to believe that our books are about everything. Birth, death, love, grief. You name it, I probably think it's in there somewhere, albeit sometimes only in the form of a throwaway character, like a wisecracking gas station attendant who pops off a few good lines about living in the present as my main character bounces on the balls of his feet, impatient to be rung up so he can race to his next car-chase. But the longer I write for a living, the more it becomes clear to me that while arrogance is a helpful tool for dealing with one's own negative reviews (or the death threats that have been posted alongside your promotional video on YouTube), the question "what is your book about" is one that I better have a coherent answer to long before it's posed to me by anyone besides the ever-present critic who lives in my head. Otherwise I find myself writing entire chapters about the shape of a certain box hedge because I've lost my way and fallen prey to that childish belief that writing is about nothing more than filling up a page. (It is, kind of, but only when you're past deadline.) That said, I can say with confidence that my latest thriller, Blind Fall, is a novel about self-acceptance. It's about how we are often forced to let go of something we believed to be an absolute truth before we can treat ourselves with the same respect we would grant our closest friend. And in that sense, it is also a story about how our own visions of our past, of where we came from and what made us who we are, become incomplete and deceptive if we turn away from of those who walked the path with us and the insights they have to offer into our own personal history.

Phew! Got that out of the way. How was that, Amazon.com editors? Did I win over some Jonathan Franzen readers with that one?

Please note that I referred to my own novel as a thriller. I did so with pride. As I've said now in numerous interviews, Blind Fall was intended to be lean, clear and forceful, a suspenseful story about gays in the military that might appeal to the broadest audience possible. That doesn't mean I dumbed down or cleaned up a more "literary"--God, I hate that word--story that's still sitting in my desk drawer. It means I chose to tell the entire story from the point-of-view of the character facing the greatest personal challenge of any in the book--John Houck, the battle-scarred Marine who discovers the comrade who saved his life in combat was secretly gay. Anything that didn't serve John's character, that didn't ring true to who he was, didn't make the cut. That was a challenge. I love the guy as much as I do any of my protagonists but let's just say we probably wouldn't end up voting for the same candidate in the Presidential election this coming November and we certainly have different CDs in rotation. (To get into character sometimes I would depart from my usual film score montages and get amped up on a little Coheed & Cambria and Incubus. Don't laugh! It's not that big of a stretch. I went to a Mottley Crue concert when I was twelve.)

I also chose to tell you who the killer was about 70 pages in. Why? Because this novel is not a whodunit. This novel is a what-the-hell-are-they-going-to-do, but that's got a few too many words in it so we call those thrillers. Don't get me wrong; there are some twists and turns along the way, but I didn't want the reader breaking sweat over who was responsible for the murder that starts off the action. I wanted the reader's heart to become invested in the relationship between John, the straight (and more than a little homophobic) Marine, and Alex, the secret gay lover of the man who saved John's life. How are these two very different men going to come to accept one another, if at all? This is the question that dominated my thoughts while I was writing the book, and if you decide to give it a read, I hope it dominates yours as well. Sometimes the best suspense comes not from the revelation of a previously concealed detail that's been skillfully foreshadowed, but from wondering how a character you have come to know intimately over the course of many chapters is going to react to a seemingly insurmountable set of obstacles. That's what I was shooting for with Blind Fall.

So there you have it, along with a few unsolicited personal details about yours truly. (Like the fact that I went to a Motley Crue concert when I was twelve.) At the very least, I hope Blind Fall keeps some of you up late at night. For the next month, my late nights will all be spent in hotels as I cross the country to promote this puppy. Maybe I'll get to meet some of you along the way.

Best,

Christopher Rice


--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

Rice's fourth thriller (after 2005's Light Before Day) clumsily mixes the plight of gays in the military with an unlikely murder investigation. John Houck, a former marine sergeant, returns to the States from Iraq, determined to make amends with his commanding officer, Capt. Mike Bowers, who was gravely injured due to John's negligence. But when he tracks Mike down at home in Owensville, Calif., John discovers Mike gruesomely murdered in his bed. John, who had no idea Mike was gay, reluctantly joins forces with Alex Martin, Mike's live-in boyfriend, to bring the killer to justice. After John and Alex learn that local law enforcement played a role in Mike's death, they must go on the run to save their own lives. A subplot involving John's brother's suicide distracts in a subpar effort that lacks the complexity of Rice's earlier novels. 10-city author tour.(Mar.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Audio CD
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Audio; Unabridged edition (March 11, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 074357172X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0743571722
  • Product Dimensions: 5.8 x 5.1 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (51 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,504,307 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Christopher Rice is the son of author Anne Rice and the late poet Stan Rice. He lives in Los Angeles. The Moonlit Earth is his fifth novel.

 

Customer Reviews

51 Reviews
5 star:
 (24)
4 star:
 (11)
3 star:
 (8)
2 star:
 (5)
1 star:
 (3)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.9 out of 5 stars (51 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

38 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Interesting suspense novel with a tinge of gay culture, February 26, 2008
This review is from: Blind Fall: A Novel (Hardcover)
I've never read any of Anne Rice's books. I didn't even know Christopher Rice was her son until my wife told me, after I'd started the book. I would guess she's a good writer though, because her son's pretty polished, and this offering is very good, to say the least.

Our hero, the main character, is John Houck, a Marine just back from Iraq and out of the Corps after a decade, wracked by guilt over a misstep that cost one of his comrades an eye, and almost cost the guy his life. Houck decides to look him up and apologize, and instead walks in on the aftermath of his murder. He pursues someone who's running away, but that individual turns out to be the dead guy's gay lover, and of course this causes Houck to undergo all sorts of soul-searching, because he never realized his friend was gay.

This is a reasonably good mystery, and a very interesting suspense novel. Once you get past the whodunit aspect of things (which is revealed rather quickly) the book has more to do with the acceptance of gays in modern society, and how they interact with the rest of us. That's interesting, and it's well-done.

I enjoyed this book a great deal, and would recommend it to anyone.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Worth a read, but don't race to the store for it, June 13, 2008
By 
Baltimore Boy79 (Baltimore, MD USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Blind Fall: A Novel (Hardcover)
I discovered Christopher Rice's work early on as I was a fan of his mother's. I've read all four of his books and enjoyed each of them. His first book, A Density of Souls, was one of his best work, along with Light Before Day. My only major complaint with his novels, to include this one, is that several times in each book the characters make decisions or take paths that stretch the grounds of believeability. While this does lead to more dramatic encounters and conflicts, I sometimes have to suspend the little voice inside saying "Who would actually do this in real life?" in order to get through the sections. But then again, this is fiction, right? Overall, I would recommend this book, but if you haven't read any of his work before and can only pick one, his first and third novels were much better.
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15 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Semper Fi, Christopher Rice, March 10, 2008
By 
This review is from: Blind Fall: A Novel (Hardcover)
Few writers can compel a reader forward as breathlessly as Christopher Rice, while along the way showing (through the characters' actions) a principle or statement about society. Often either the action suffers from didacticism or the message is lost in the action. Not here - action and meaning work seamlessly together in a rich tale.

The main character is driven by a sense of loyalty - sometimes recklessly - but he also suffers from problems that are epidemic in American culture: Homophobia and an ideal of hypermasculinity that is ultimately unattainable; and beliefs that he must be a protector and that he owes penitence for his past failures in this regard. He must overcome these flaws and feelings of inadequacy and by the end he does, in a credible manner.

The relationships are also poignant. Love between men can be a brotherly platonic sort of love, the kind that allows them to survive in combat, or it can be a marital and sexual love that allows them to survive a lifetime together. Rice demonstrates both kinds of love and how men who feel one can come to understand the other. This is difficult territory in American literature and Rice is brave to tackle it, and he succeeds masterfully.

Semper Fi, Christopher!
Rich Merritt
Code of Conduct
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Mike Bowers, Ray Duncan, Danny Oster, Alex Martin, John Houck, Marine Corps, Cathedral Beach, San Diego, Charlotte Martin, Yucca Valley, The Catch Trap, Hanrock County, Stephen Royce, Lightning Mike, Old Woman Springs Road, Devote Meadows, Tina Gray, Charlie Miller, Charles Keaton, Alhambra Hotel, The Golden Door, Baton Rouge, Recon Marines, Loma Linda, Ford Explorer
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