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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Dark Side of the Teaching Force!, June 28, 2002
Like Stephen King, Peter Abrahams has the literary skill and imagination to tap into our worst nightmares and bring them chillingly to life. His special forte seems to lie in exploring the nature of obsession: the monster that lurks beneath a mask of normalcy until circumstances suddenly combine to put its prey within reach. Julian Sawyer, THE TUTOR, is a man obsessed with a meglomaniacal desire to create a living novel out of the raw material of ordinary people's lives...to first learn their secrets and then exploit them at his will in order to destroy them. The Gardner family is his chosen target. Scott and Linda are doing their best to achieve today's upper-middle class dream of 'having it all', but their sand-castle world is a sadly dysfunctional one. Scott, desperately competing with his more effectual brother, has never been able to achieve the quick-fix financial success that he craves; Linda is career-driven to the point where she has become oblivious to what's going on with her children, and both teen-age Brandon and his precocious eleven-year-old sister Ruby are in trouble. That trouble becomes grim reality for his shocked parents when Brandon's SAT results are far below their expectations, although only Ruby...escaping parental pressures to become what she is not into a dream world with her idol, Sherlock Holmes...realizes the full extent of his rebellious, anti-social behaviors. In desperation, Linda calls a tutoring service, and Julian Sawyer enters their lives. In the tradition of "Kind Lady" and "Night Must Fall", he slowly gains their confidence and trust which, in turn, also exposes their fears and weaknesses. When circumstances combine to place Julian in charge, the stage is set for an increasingly horrific series of life-threatening confrontations that beggar description. THE TUTOR walks an extraordinary stylistic tightrope between spine-tingling suspense and dark horror...a tour de force combination of taut plotting and brilliant characterization that captured and held me spellbound. Peter Abrahams careful attention to the 'whys' of their behaviors made me not only understand the Gardners as fallible human beings, but care deeply about them, especially young Ruby who is probably one of the most enchanting fictional children that I've encountered in my recent reading. His talent makes the bizarre seem believable, and I found it impossible not to accept the complete plausibility of his nightmarish premise. This is not an easy novel to read, but it is one that the reader will not readily forget...a totally gripping literary experience and a benchmark for the genre.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A page-turner, September 3, 2002
This is my first Peter Abrahams book, so don't know how it compares to his others. But it's definitely a page-turner and has decent characters, most of whom are not supposed to be the least bit lovable. Yes, there is swearing, but the author knows how to make a reader use a dictionary occasionally as well. A nice combination of light humor mixed with the dark character of the tutor-from-...! A nice change from detective/crime/lawyer novels when you're not busy reading Tolstoy.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A suspenseful page-turner, August 15, 2006
Meet the Gardners, a typical American family: father Scott works in the family business, resents his older brother, and longs to find a quick path to wealth; mother Linda is harried, trying to juggle work and family life while pinning her dreams of a better future on her kids; teenage son Brandon is rebellious, experimenting with drugs and alcohol; pre-teen daughter Ruby is precocious, escaping through Sherlock Holmes novels; and mystery child Adam just may be the cause of the entire family's discontent. When Justin attains a "low" (75th percentile) score on his SATs, this event is the catalyst that sets the family in search of a solution, a solution which arrives in the form of Julian Sawyer, personal tutor. At first, Julian seems to be a Godsend--he connects with Brandon, bails out Ruby, solves Linda's work crisis, and even gives Scott some priceless tips on his tennis game. But are things really what they seem? Although the story is told from the perspectives of all five main characters in turn, author Peter Abrahams focuses mainly on the points of view of Ruby, an amateur sleuth who begins to suspect that something is not quite right, and Julian, who offers the reader glimpses into his true nature. The tension between this unlikely pair builds throughout the story, and Abrahams does an excellent job of drawing the reader in. One small complaint I had is that Julian's expertise in virtually every subject with which he is confronted is a bit contrived. On the other hand, that's kind of the point: this is no ordinary villain, but rather your worst nightmare--the devil who masquerades as your savior. Overall, I found this book entertaining and engrossing. I definitely enjoy Abraham's writing style, and I will continue reading his works.
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