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Cross Current [Hardcover]

Christine Kling (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 28, 2004
Christine Kling’s first novel, Surface Tension, introduced a remarkable sleuth in Seychelle Sullivan. Now, in Kling’s electrifying new book, Sullivan returns–a tall, strong, beautiful woman in a man’s world, caught up in a complex drama set on the South Florida seacoast, where the crimes, hopes, and follies of dreamers and con artists all come washing ashore.

Seychelle is proud to follow in her father’s footsteps and work the waters on a tugboat. She remembers Florida before it fractured between rich and poor, white and black, Cuban and Haitian. For Seychelle, life is all about making a living, making love, and keeping her eye on the beauty that still remains in an ever-changing community. Then her life takes a turn when her tug intercepts with a swamped fishing boat in the Gulf Stream. Inside the boat are a murdered woman and a little girl in a white dress.

When Seychelle returns to shore with a traumatized Haitian girl named Solange in her cabin, she is faced with the border patrol, the police, and an unraveling love affair. Determined to protect Solange, and somehow keep her from being sent back to Haiti, Seychelle becomes obsessed with the forces that nearly killed the girl–and left her speechless with terror. All Seychelle knows for sure is that Solange’s father was an American . . . and that somehow she slipped through a murderer’s hands.

Exploring the hidden world of Florida’s Haitian community, Seychelle realizes that Solange is still in great danger–and that one killer has claimed dozens of lives. With a murderer stalking the child, Seychelle is racing to unravel dangerous truths. But to get the answers she needs, she must return to where it all started: in the waters of the Gulf Stream, where people died for a hope and prayer– and a man with a machete did the work of the devil himself.

Taut, suspenseful, and filled with remarkable descriptions of Florida’s many moods and guises–from million-dollar waterfront homes to haunted, backwater mangrove swamps and secret Voodoo rituals–Cross Current is alive with personalities and passion and the work of an author boldly staking out territory all her own.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Salvage boat captain and sometime sleuth Seychelle Sullivan returns in Kling's follow-up to her well-received debut, Surface Tension, this time to aid a frightened Haitian waif named Solange. Seychelle—who's plying the South Florida waters on her tugboat, the Gorda, with her mechanic cum lover, B.J.—discovers the girl on a swamped boat and makes saving her, both from danger and from immigration officials, a personal crusade. The recent murder of some Haitian refugees and a creepy visitor to Solange's hospital room convince Seychelle that the frightened girl is in peril. More challenges come from tough guys with various agendas. Detective Victor Collazo, with whom Seychelle has a combative history, seems determined to thwart her effort and return the child. Border Patrol Agent Russ Elliott presses a similar agenda, though Seychelle's lawyer and best friend Jeannie does her best to parry his thrusts. Retired DEA agent Joe D'Angelo conveniently arrives to perk up Seychelle's libido (B.J. notwithstanding) and address some unanswered questions about her dead father, with whom he worked, and a surprise visit by Seychelle's black-sheep brother, Pit, threatens even more disruption. Savvy readers will be two steps ahead of the plot, which features several genre set pieces, but Kling writes with crisp assurance, especially about life in coastal South Florida, and her supporting cast, if crowded, is colorful.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

As in her debut (Surface Tension, 2002), Ft. Lauderdale tugboat skipper Seychelles Sullivan happens upon a dead woman adrift on the Gulf Stream, but this time there's salvage aboard: a girl named Solange, half-dead from exposure, who stirs our heroine's maternal instincts and sets her on a mission to find the girl's American father before she can be deported back to Haiti and a life of servitude. As the only witness to the latest in a string of brutal refugee murders that may have occult significance, Solange is also of great interest to powerful men on both sides of the law. Seychelles draws upon a large, supportive cast, including a few ogle-worthy guys, and deepens ties to a love interest and to her deceased father, whose honor is called into question when some old drug-running pals resurface. To these convoluted matters of the heart, Kling adds swift plotting, convincing nautical detail, voodoo lore, and tropical scenery, all of which adds up to a satisfying if unsurprising series that is Florida's answer to Grafton and Barr. David Wright
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Ballantine Books; 1ST edition (September 28, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0345448294
  • ISBN-13: 978-0345448293
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.2 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,453,619 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I have spent more than thirty years living on and around boats and cruising the waters of the North and South Pacific, the Atlantic, and the Caribbean. I've written articles and stories for many boating publications including Sailing, Cruising World, Motor Boating & Sailing, and The Tiller and the Pen. When I was married, I helped my husband build a 55-foot custom sailing yacht. After launching her, we sailed through the Panama Canal to St. Thomas in the U.S. Virgin Islands where we chartered for over two years. While in the islands, I received my 100-ton Auxiliary Sail Captains license.

It was that sailing experience that led me to set my first nautical suspense novel, SURFACE TENSION (2002), on the waterfront in Fort Lauderdale. Featuring Florida female tug and salvage captain, Seychelle Sullivan, the first book was followed by CROSS CURRENT (2004) and BITTER END (2005). The fourth book in the series, WRECKERS' KEY was released in February 2007. I'm now retired from my day job as an English professor at Broward College in Fort Lauderdale, and I am living the dream of full-time cruising on board my 33-foot Caliber sailboat Talespinner. I'm hard at work preparing my new stand-alone sailing thriller set in the Caribbean, CIRCLE OF BONES, for release in late summer of 2011.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Socially-conscious mystery, December 3, 2004
This review is from: Cross Current (Hardcover)
This is an exciting and moving story, well written, with a social conscious. Christine Kling knows her Florida, knows her boats, and knows how to build a story to a satisfying climax. Her research and knowledge of the plight of Haitian immigrants tells a horror story of the shameful way this country treats desperate children and it should be required reading for members of Congress. But don't let the social message fool you--this is one great read and one great thriller/mystery. You do not have to be a fan of Florida thrillers to enjoy this book-and to appreciate the message in the mystery. Her descriptive passages are excellent-so much it makes me want to explore the east coast of Florida with a new eye-and a good boat captain. Maybe her BJ is available?
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars When Circumventing the Law is the Right Thing to Do ..., November 10, 2005
As Seychelle Sullivan and her sometime mechanic and deckhand, B.J. were towing in the Bahamian cruiser, Miss Agnes to Port Everglades, they discussed the incomprehensible conditions and desparation that made 50 people jam into a small boat, with the hope of building a new life for themselves. They risked everything, despite all odds, not caring whether it was legal or illegal, desiring nothing more than to start a new life. Seychelle had no clue how she would be entangled in the lives of these desparate people ... and their community. She did not know what lay in store for her, in the very near future, when she responded to a call from Mike Beesting, a former Ft. Lauderdale police officer. He had a dead starting battery and was stranded six to eight miles from Pompano Beach after taking a good buddy out fishing. While on the way out to rescue Mike and his pal, Seychelle spotted what she thought was dark debris in the water. This awakened her instincts for a possible rescue, that someone may be in trouble, so she went in for a closer look. What she saw astounded her: an emaciated Haitian girl of about 10 years old, who was dazed and dehydrated, sitting next to the bloated dead body of a lady wearing a torn brightly colored dress. Seychelle did not immediately notice the head wound, a huge gash in her skull ... most likley the cause of her death.

Seychelle debated whether or not to call the Coast Guard immediately, as required by law, or delay. She recalled the media circus after the rescue of the Cuban boy, Elian Gonzalez and decided to assess the situation first, call later. The little girl knew a bit of English and spoke haltingly and shyly with Seychelle. Unexpectedly, she grabbed Seychelle's hand and asked plaintively, "You help me?" Seychelle quickly made other arrangements to rescue Mike and his pal, Joe, while she pondered the ramifications of her heartfelt committment to save the life of this homeless little girl. After reporting her discovery to the Coast Guard and port authorities, both Border Patrol and Fort Lauderdale Police Department sent representatives to investigate the scene.

Seychelle found herself in the middle of a controversial territorial dispute where even the legal authorities were unsure who had jurisdiction over many aspects of the rescue. Seychelle right then and there felt how utterly important it was to save the life of this little girl, who claimed she had an American father whose name and address she did not know. Seychelle vowed to do everything within her power to help this little girl remain in the USA and reunite with her father.

The author creates hairpin turns and unusual loop to loop twists in the plot as she builds suspense and uncovers an underground money-making industry which deals in trading human lives, mostly that of children and teenagers. The author did a superb job of researching Voo Doo customs and religious beliefs. They play a large role in the lives of the Haitian community into which Seychelle must delve to help Solange, her young charge. Each chapter reveals a new depth and revelation about complex customs and the social milieu of the Haitian immigrants. Seychelle discovers horrible truths about the living conditions and underground slave trade which is being conducted by unscrupulous individuals who care only about making money. Seychelle gives no thought to her own safety or the risks she is taking to make good her promise to help this little girl achieve her dream. This reader was glued to every page, wanting to learn more as new details and clues surfaced. Erzulie, the lady who accompanied Solange, had indeed been murdered, she died of blows to the head from a machete. The book comes to a gut-wrenching climax which takes Seychelle to the Andros Islands in the Bahamas ... where her own life is at serious risk of permanent injury and death. She discovers who the ring-leaders of the slave trade are and solves the mysteries associated with this case. Just like, "Surface Tension, the first book by this author, I read the second book in one sitting. I had to connect all the dots to the very end. This book receives my highest endorsement and recommendations.
Erika Borsos (erikab93)
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars great book, ghost of John McDonald, August 27, 2008
Hey, in a world where books about Florida abound, this one stands out. It's great on so many levels. If you like Florida books, you'll love it. Even if you don't like Florida mysteries, you should read this one--it's a great mystery. Reminds me of the late great John McDonald.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Looking down at the old wooden Bahamian cruiser Miss Agnes, resting on her side on the white sand bottom, it was hard to imagine that people had died here. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
chickee hut, cuddy cabin, ocean racer, buoyancy compensator, concrete dock, fuel dock, cargo shorts, dock lines
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Christine Kling, Miss Agnes, Miss Sullivan, Gulf Stream, Fort Lauderdale, Border Patrol, Swap Shop, Bimini Express, Agent D'Ugard, Coast Guard, Outta the Blue, Seychelle Sullivan, South Florida, Gil Lynch, Joe D'Angelo, Port Everglades, Racine Toussaint, Hillsboro Inlet, Martine Gohin, South Bimini, Tugboat Annie, Earth Angel, Little Bitt, Mambo Racine, New River
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