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Blown [Audio CD]

4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Audio CD
  • Publisher: Books on Tape
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1415922772
  • ISBN-13: 978-1415922774
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,536,501 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Francine Mathews, who also writes as Stephanie Barron, is the author of twenty novels of mystery, history, and suspense. A graduate of Princeton and Stanford, she spent four years as an intelligence analyst at the CIA, and presently lives and works in Colorado.

 

Customer Reviews

8 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A sleeper agent wreaks havoc in the U.S., July 19, 2005
By 
This review is from: Blown (Hardcover)
After almost single-handedly taking down the international terrorist organization Thirty April (as described in Mathews' 2001 novel, The Cutout), CIA Agent Caroline Carmichael assumes she will have sufficient time to recoup the considerable physical and mental strength expended to achieve that goal. Her assumption is proven wrong only weeks later when a Thirty April sleeper agent suddenly attacks on U.S. soil, slaughtering hundreds of runners participating in the Washington DC Marine Corp marathon with ricin laced water. Marked as a target by the terrorist in his public pronouncements, Caroline has extra motivation to track him down before he can fulfill the rest of his lethal objectives.

There's much to admire about Blown--its intense action scenes, deliberate pacing, knowing characterization, and capacity to keep readers guessing are just a few qualities that spring to mind--but its most appealing aspect is by far its powerful and unsettling plot, dealing with the aftermath of the apparent downfall of a major terrorist organization. Unlike most novels of this type, which naively assume the danger is over as soon as the organization's top leadership is eliminated, Blown points out that the danger persists as long as even one even slightly competent person still believes in the group's goals. Proceeding from this premise, Mathews spins a hair-raising thriller guaranteed to spur readers' thinking about just how vulnerable they really are.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars An Outstanding Sequel - But Not A Stand-Alone Novel, June 2, 2005
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This review is from: Blown (Hardcover)
I read Francine Mathews' two novels, "The Cutout" and "Blown," back-to-back, and together they make for some intensely exciting reading. However, while "The Cutout" stands on its own as a novel, "Blown" is more a sequel, a Part II, dependent on the prior book for a thorough understanding of the content. Both books are chilling thrillers concerning the Neo-Nazi terrorist organization "30 April." "Blown" continues the saga of tough, talented Caroline Carmichael, CIA intelligence analyst turned operative.

Caroline has worked for the last two years for the Counterterrorism Center, (CTC), focusing almost obsessively, on "30 April" a disciplined group of Eastern European terrorists whose goal is to cleanse Europe of all non-Aryans. This group was responsible for the deadly explosion which killed everyone onboard MedAir Flight 901, including her husband, former deputy director of the CTC, Eric Carmichael. The 30 April Organization's leader, Croatian Mlan Krucevic, was a trained geneticist who used biological agents in human experiments. Just a few days before this novel begins, he and his group kidnapped US Vice President Sophie Payne, while she was on an official visit to Berlin. Krucevic and most of his cohorts were killed during the subsequent search and rescue mission. Unfortunately, so was the American vice president. While reviewing videotape footage of the kidnapping, a select few CTC employees, including Caroline, discover that Eric Carmichael is still alive. His face is visible in the terrorist helicopter which makes-off with Ms. Payne. Scottie Sorensen Chief of CTC and Eric's boss, had secretly recruited him to infiltrate 30 April. Now, after the vice president's unexpected murder, Eric has become a liability to Sorenson, and must be eliminated. Sorenson "blows" Carmichael's cover.

As the novel opens, Daniel Becker, an American citizen and member of a US based 30 April cell, spikes drinking water with deadly poison. He then hands out cups of the doctored water to runners participating in a marathon, with fatal results. Becker disappears and reemerges several hours later to kill the Director of Central Intelligence. Caroline is next on his list. A series of emails are sent to the Washington Post newsroom, warning that retribution is at hand for the death of Krucevic. Invoking the name of Tim McVeigh, as well as Ruby Ridge and Waco, the text says, "The End Times are coming. Prepare."

Caroline Carmichael, aware of Sorenson's betrayal, understands it is almost impossible to beat the Chief at his game. Without the power or the proof to expose him, she is about to resign from the CIA when she learns of the attack, and the epidemic number of deaths following the marathon. As the major expert on the terrorist organization, she is drawn into the new investigation. Then she hears her husband has been arrested in Germany as a terrorist operative. Not trusting anyone and suspecting everyone, Caroline is helpless as far as assisting Eric to escape and evade his former boss. She must focus on identifying and capturing the members of the domestic terrorist cell.

Francine Mathews, is a former CIA analyst who brings her expertise to the suspenseful narrative, making her characters and scenarios quite credible and giving a behind-the-scenes look at our intelligence community. However, I really question whether this novel can stand on its own. The storyline and sub-plots are quite dependent on "The Cutout" for an enormous amount of information not provided here. Segments concerning Eric Carmichael, his activities with 30 April, the kidnapping and death of Vice President Payne, Scottie Sorenson's rogue behavior, and almost everything which refers to Krucevic's son, Jozsef, are given scant attention here, yet these absent elements are so critical to enjoying and understanding "Blown." I have to qualify and say that although this is an excellent political action thriller, (I enjoyed it immensely), it is only so in combination with Ms. Mathews' prior novel. I do recommend reading them both together.
JANA
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A page-turner full of excitement, emotion and action, April 30, 2005
By 
Bookreporter (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Blown (Hardcover)
Francine Mathews is a former CIA analyst who began her writing career authoring a number of impressive mystery novels. A few years ago she began writing about the world she knew best --- the world of espionage. THE CUTOUT was Mathews's first work of espionage fiction, an intriguing work of duplicity, mayhem, and death. Some four years later, Mathews has returned to the characters and the world of THE CUTOUT with a riveting sequel titled BLOWN.

BLOWN reintroduces Caroline Carmichael, the troubled CIA field agent who first appeared in THE CUTOUT. After a brilliantly frightening introduction, we find Carmichael cleaning out her desk, having tendered her resignation due to the duplicity of Scottie Sorensen, the CIA's Chief of Counterterrorism and Carmichael's boss. Carmichael is pressed back into duty when a domestic terrorist named Daniel Becker commits an act of mass murder and silently slips away, only to strike again several hours later by assassinating a high-ranking government official.

Carmichael's expertise is required because it appears that Becker is a member of a domestic component of 30 April, the international terrorist group whose leader was murdered by Carmichael in THE CUTOUT. Becker, who seems to be waging a one-man war on the United States government, is seemingly untouchable and unstoppable as he moves across the eastern United States cutting a swath of violence and death in his wake.

Meanwhile, Eric Carmichael, Caroline's husband, is hiding in Berlin with every hand raised against him. Believed by everyone --- including Caroline --- to have died three years previously, Eric in fact has been functioning at the behest of Sorensen as a double agent against 30 April. When his mission goes horribly, irrevocably wrong, Eric finds himself pursued by both sides in the war on terror. When captured, he becomes a liability to Sorensen --- one that must be eliminated right away.

BLOWN picks up almost immediately from where THE CUTOUT left off. While it is not entirely necessary to read THE CUTOUT before picking up BLOWN, your enjoyment of the latter will be increased dramatically by doing so. Mathews does not scrimp on the tension, the excitement, or the surprises. From the opening pages, where a domestic terrorist executes a fiendishly brilliant attack upon a highly publicized gathering, to the conclusion, which contains surprise after surprise (at least one of which you'll never see coming), Mathews creates the sense that the reader should be holding BLOWN in one hand and a ticking stopwatch in the other.

Mathews also introduces a number of new and interesting supporting characters. Among them is an off-kilter genius named Raphael, who literally hijacks the book. He is so intriguing, however, that you won't care.

Full of excitement, emotion and action, BLOWN is a definite page-turner.

--- Reviewed by Joe Hartlaub
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Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Tom Shephard, Steve Price, Sophie Payne, Mlan Krucevic, Caroline Carmichael, Daniel Becker, White House, George Enfield, Ricin Boy, Dare Atwood, Norm Wilhelm, Scottie Sorensen, United States, Hains Point, Jack Bigelow, Rebekah Becker, Secret Service, Marine Corps Marathon, West Virginia, Cuddy Wilmot, True Citizens, Wally Aronson, Cory Rinehart, Thirty April, Bethesda Naval
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