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A Blind Eye: A Novel
 
 

A Blind Eye: A Novel (Mass Market Paperback)

by G M Ford (Author) "The woman's eyes were weary and rimmed with red ..." (more)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
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Frank Corso already survived a defrocking by The New York Times, following his alleged fabrication of a major crime story. Having since re-created himself as a true-crime writer, he can ill afford to have his credibility questioned again. So when, in G.M. Ford's A Blind Eye, he is subpoenaed to back up his book-selling boast about a Texas high-society murder, Corso disappears into the upper Midwest with his photographer (and former lover), Meg Dougherty--only to stumble onto one of the most horrific stories of his career.

Seeking shelter after an SUV accident in tiny, blizzard-racked Avalon, Wisconsin, Corso discovers the bones of Eldred Holmes and his sons shoved beneath an abandoned barn. Neighbors thought the family had moved away 15 years before; instead, its males had been murdered. Bargaining with Avalon's sheriff to stay free of the Texas authorities, Corso agrees to investigate these killings. The solution may lie with Eldred's wife, Sissy, an exotic seductress whose skeleton isn't among the pile, and whose deliberately obscured--and bloody--trail leads the author and Dougherty to a slain nun in Pennsylvania, a family-destroying fire among isolated hill folk in New York, and a desperate, deadly ambush in northern Michigan. It doesn't take the rangy Corso long to realize that he's dealing with a protean and controlling killer, immune to remorse.

Ford is adept at dribbling out the sort of revelations that build fictional suspense. He enhances that with a mordant wit, oddball secondary players, and a protagonist whose gruffness is infrequently but intriguingly undermined by a warmth born of loyalty. Yet A Blind Eye, for all of its gripping darkness, pales beside its predecessors, Fury and Black River. The super-secret information source to which Corso turns here whenever he loses his quarry's scent is a contrivance beneath Ford's talents. And the assassination of an Avalon deputy, for which Corso is held responsible, is a complication with little purpose and no satisfactions. Fortunately, this book's chilling close makes the whole thing go down easier. --J. Kingston Pierce --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.



Books in Canada

The epigraph to this book serves fair notice that what follows will be not be easy sledding. G.M. Ford (yes, that is his real name) quotes British novelist G.K. Chesterton saying that while "children are innocent and love justice," most of us are "wicked and prefer mercy."
Hear, hear: A Blind Eye opens with true crime writer Frank Corso running from Texas rangers with an ominous subpoena. They want to drag him in to question before a grand jury in connection with a book-selling boast that he knew where a body was buried. The truth is, Corso only knew a guy who knew where the body was buried, and the gentleman who knew has pulled a runner. To avoid a long jail sentence and possible financial ruin, Corso must avoid Texas' finest until the grand jury expires in a little over a week. He has tricked his photographer and former lover, the six-foot-tall tattooed goth Amazon, Meg Dougherty, into coming along for the high speed chase.
The pursuit takes them to the outskirts of an isolated Illinois town in the middle of the mother of all blizzards. Their rented SUV crashes and the two narrowly escape death by struggling into an old abandoned cabin. In the process of cannibalizing the floor of a nearby shack for firewood, they discover the bodies of the previous inhabitants, sealed in plastic bags. Because of re-election problems, the local sheriff promises to give the Texas Rangers the slip if, and only if, Corso agrees to get to the bottom of this.
It's an offer they can't refuse, but they soon find that the devil cuts less exacting deals. The search for the family's killer takes Corso and Dougherty to a soon-to-be-abandoned convent, where they learn of a mad sex-crazed girl with a cloudy past and an equally murky, violent future. They continue to follow her bloody footprints through the shadier parts of the Northeast. The more they learn, the worse the picture looks, including backwoods incest, mass murder, and the complete indifference of law enforcement to all of the above.
As the third novel in a mystery series, A Blind Eye is a bit of a let down. It's not just that the book feels like it was rushed or that the set up is too neat (e.g., Corso is on the run because he can't find a dead body, and—lo!—he stumbles onto a bunch of dead bodies). In order for bleak books to work, there has to be somebody for the reader to pull for. But neither Corso, nor the often bitchy Dougherty, nor any of the other characters they bump into for that matter, fit that bill, leaving us with a lot of gratuitous violence (which, I admit, can be fun) with little context for understanding it.
The book does have its moments. I particularly liked the gag, at Seattleites Corso and Dogherty's expense, about not being able to get a double tall latte at a back country diner; and the pacing and writing are at least a couple of notches above most mystery novels. In fact, one tack that Ford tries is to explore the mystery of Corso himself. Unlike Ford's previous series of first person Leo Watterman mysteries, this group of novels is told at a remove. The details of Corso's past life trickle out only grudgingly, from one volume to the next. It's a cheap trick but it works: This installment left me curious enough to come back for the next book in the series.
Jeremy Lott (Books in Canada)
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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12 Reviews
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4.2 out of 5 stars (12 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars American Gothic, Mar 7 2004
By Stephen Dedman (Bayswater, WA Australia) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: A Blind Eye (Hardcover)
In an opening sequence as fast-paced and frantic as the prologue to an Indiana Jones movie, true crime writer Frank Corso (trying to avoid appearing before a Grand Jury in Texas as a material witness) and his ex-lover Megan Dougherty drive from snowbound O'Hare airport in the hope of catching a plane from Madison... but they skid on an icy road and take shelter in a long-abandoned farmhouse. Tearing up some floorboards for firewood, they find several buried bodies. The Texans catch up with Corso while he's recovering from the crash in hospital in the small town of Avalon, and Corso makes a deal with the local sheriff: if he solves the murder and helps her win re-election, she'll fight the extradition order for a few days until the Grand Jury case is over.

Corso soon becomes intrigued by the case, then horrified, and continues working to solve it even after the sheriff's deputy is found dead and he's accused of the murder.

Apart from a rather contrived beginning, A Blind Eye is an excellently crafted fast-paced thriller which builds up to a gripping climax, comparable to Red Dragon or The Silence of the Lambs. Ford makes good use of forensic science (including some rather gruesome details of forensic entomology) as well Corso and Dougherty's knack for extracting the information they need from people and computers, and cunningly weaves in some clues that even Corso misses. There's plenty of action as Corso tries to elude everyone who's trying to catch or kill him, and more than a hint of sexual tension, though most of the sex happens off-stage (if not necessarily off-camera).

Ford is also skilled at creating interesting, often surprising, characters in remarkably few words. His good guys have flaws, and it's difficult not to empathise (at least a little) with his killers as well as most of their victims. His dialogue is sharp, but believable. And like Stephen King or Bruce Springsteen, Ford does an excellent job of portraying slowly-dying rust-belt Smalltown USA, where the cemetery is not only all that remains of an area's history but the closest thing it has to a claim on the future.

Though grim to the point of being gothic, A Blind Eye is a genuinely gripping read that should appeal to all thriller, mystery and horror enthusiasts.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Snowblind and snowjobbed, Feb 19 2004
By David Roy (Vancouver, BC) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: A Blind Eye (Hardcover)
Setting your mysteries in Seattle (one of my favourite cities) is not the way to keep me as a reader, but it will certainly help get me started. Thankfully, G.M. Ford has a way with writing that will always keep me around. His Leo Waterman mysteries were first-rate, and his Frank Corso books have kept his string of winning novels alive. A Blind Eye continues this, as Ford creates a page-turner that will keep any hard-boiled detective fan glued to the text.

True Crime author and disgraced newspaper reporter Frank Corso is having a bad day. He's stuck in Chicago's O'Hare airport, snowed in and stranded, with an irate Meg Dougherty (former lover and one real friend) along for the ride. Why is Meg irate? Because Frank never bothered to tell her that the reason for the "story" they are pursuing is really because two Texas rangers have a warrant for his arrest. Stuck in an airport, his picture showing up on CNN and security starting to look at him strangely, Corso drags Meg on an ill-considered car ride into Wisconsin, where icy roads send them to the bottom of a ravine. What they discover there will bring more than just Texas law enforcement down on his head. It will involve them in a cross-country trip on the trail of a serial killer uncaught for over 30 years. It also, of course, makes him a target.

A Blind Eye takes Corso out of his familiar Seattle, and I think it stretched Ford's writing talent as well. Seattle and western Washington has always been a cozy location for him in which to write, with familiar territory and landmarks making identification easier. This one starts out in Chicago, goes to southern Wisconsin, Iowa, Pennsylvania, and the wilds of the New Jersey mountains. Removed from his familiar environs, Ford has to work a little bit harder, and he does a great job. Some of it is a bit stereotypical (I'm from Iowa, and he captures it decently, but not wonderfully), but overall it shows that he did some research on his locales. Removing Corso and Dougherty from the northwest also allows him to broaden their characters as well. Seeing them on the run presents a different side of them, how they react when desperation hits. Usually, we see our heroes chasing the bad guys, not the other way around.

The relationship between Dougherty and Corso crackles with energy. They used to be lovers and have now become the best of friends. Dougherty is extremely annoyed with Corso, but she goes along with him anyway. She obviously still loves him to put up with all that he puts her through. In fact, their relationship goes through an even more pronounced change in A Blind Eye, evolving as they are forced together by circumstances. That's one thing I love about Ford's writing: the characters are always open to change and growth. While it certainly is not necessary to read the books in order, things change enough that you are rewarded for doing so. This makes both of them even deeper characters then most genre detectives.

The minor characters are given just enough depth to be believable while not overshadowing the protagonists. The sheriff of the Wisconsin town is predictably overwhelmed by having all of the media attention centered on her, along with a gloryhound deputy who's gunning for her job. This situation actually ends up being important, driving some of the action despite the fact that it's not center-stage. This is a bit distracting from the main plot, but it's not critical. Most of the rest get little, if any, development, but their suitably quirky and/or malevolent to serve their roles. The one exception to this isn't obvious until the end, however. In between some of the chapters are entries from a journal whose author is unrevealed. As the book goes on, it becomes clearer and actually adds to the horror of what is happening, as we realize that the cycle of violence may not be ending like we thought it would.

There are only a couple of faults with this book. The first is the fact that there are some superfluous scenes in the book that seem to be included just to show us how tough Corso is. Regular readers already know how tough he is, and subsequent events in the book show this to new readers. Unless Ford is just trying to show us what our rights are during a traffic stop, I see no point to them. While this is forgivable, the second problem is far more damning.

The book posits the existence of a super-secret organization that journalists and others can use to get information that is otherwise unobtainable (at least in a timely manner). This organization is so secret that they will not accept any new queries from a phone number they don't have on file, and any such calls require that the phone be disposed of as soon as the call is completed. The presentation of this organization screams PLOT DEVELOPMENT every time Corso uses it, bringing me out of the narrative. It results in a couple of funny scenes (especially when Corso has to use Meg's phone for a question), but overall it's just distracting.

Overall, A Blind Eye is a wonderful page-turner. It's not a taxing read, in fact it's perfect for Sunday afternoons or beach reading. If you like your mysteries with great characters who grow and change, the Frank Corso books are definitely for you. You don't even have very many to catch up on. Whatever you do, though, check this one out.

David Roy

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5.0 out of 5 stars Exciting action--very well written, Jan 16 2004
This review is from: A Blind Eye (Hardcover)
All he has to do is stay away from the Texas Rangers for a few more days--until the Grand Jury term expires and he can go home. But a freak snowstorm strands writer Frank Corso, along with sometime-girlfriend and photographer Meg Dougherty in an airport and Frank decides to brave the blizzard rather than wait to be arrested. Stuck in the blizzard, Frank and Meg discover evidence of a seventeen-year-old murder. As part of a bargain to keep him away from the Rangers, Frank agrees to look into the old murder and Meg reluctantly goes along.

What they find is a story of abuse, incest, and a girl's attempts to control her environment at any cost. As they get closer, they wonder whether this girl, now a woman, might kill again--and whether they can stay alive themselves. Of course, getting closer depends on staying ahead of the Rangers, the FBI, and the local Sheriff who has her own issues.
Author G. M. Ford writes a page-turning and compelling story. Frank, with his little problem with the truth, makes an intriguing character--bad enough to be sympathetic but heroic enough to make him admirable as well. Ford's writing grabs the reader by the throat and pulls them through an exciting adventure.

Readers who enjoy action, a bit of psychological analysis, wise-talking heros, and a quirky bit of romance will definitely want to get their hands on A BLIND EYE.

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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Chilling thriller!
G.M. Ford's third Frank Corso novel, "A Blind Eye" is an intense, dark, fast paced mystery thriller. Read more
Published on Jan 13 2004 by nobizinfla

4.0 out of 5 stars Still a Fan
I have all of the Leo Waterman and Frank Corso books. Was Blind Eye one of the best? Doesn't even come close to Black River, but I don't regret having made the purchase and... Read more
Published on Nov 3 2003

2.0 out of 5 stars GM Ford's Blind Eye needs to be recalled.
Having read the 6 Waterman novels - all are great fun and well done (very Parker like). And the first two Corso mysteries were also wonderful. Read more
Published on Oct 22 2003

5.0 out of 5 stars Corso is back and well worth the read!
At the opposite end of the spectrum from lightweight Robert B. Parker type work is author G. M. Ford. Read more
Published on Oct 20 2003 by Kevin Tipple

5.0 out of 5 stars On the trail of a twisted killer.
"A Blind Eye," by G. M. Ford, features the tough and taciturn Frank Corso, a true crime writer who is on the lam. Read more
Published on Oct 13 2003 by E. Bukowsky

5.0 out of 5 stars Twists...twists...twists
First G.M. Ford book I've read. Very entertaining with likable characters. Dialoge reveals quite a sense of humor. Starts out a bit slow but going to the end is worth the trip.
Published on Aug 18 2003

3.0 out of 5 stars Decently crafted but on the whole a downer
I've read every one of G.M Ford's books. This book covers similar territory to his second book "Cast in Stone". Read more
Published on Jul 17 2003

4.0 out of 5 stars Solid, but not Ford's best
After finishing Black River (without a doubt, a 5-star book), I rushed out to pick up A Blind Eye. Corso is a fantastic character as usual, the new setting is a nice change of... Read more
Published on Jul 8 2003

5.0 out of 5 stars The suspense is at the usual high level for a G. M. Ford boo
Reporter Frank Corso fell from grace when he was accused of making up a crime story. However, Frank is resourceful and easily reinvented himself into a true-crime writer who... Read more
Published on Jul 2 2003 by Harriet Klausner

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