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Bad Chemistry
 
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Bad Chemistry (Paperback)

by Gary Krist (Author)
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (31 customer reviews)

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3 new from CDN$ 17.95 19 used from CDN$ 2.20

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Product Description

From Amazon.com

During the 1980s, Gary Krist won a solid reputation as a decidedly literary author. In collections such as Bone by Bone and The Garden State, his characters wrestle with a variety of down-to-earth dilemmas--family discord, bum relationships, career confusions--and their success or failure at resolving these problems makes for elegant and intelligent narratives. This time around, however, Krist applies his psychological deftness to a more pulse-pounding genre, attempting to produce that chimerical creature, the thinking person's thriller. Has he succeeded?

That he has. Bad Chemistry revolves around Kate Theodorus, a former beat cop turned social worker. After a discomforting opening--a party at which a dog is mysteriously set aflame--Kate's husband Joel heads out to a convenience store for some microwave popcorn. Hours pass, then days, and still he fails to return. Has Joel been kidnapped? Has something gone seriously wrong with his importing business (which does, after all, sell "natural" pharmaceuticals from the Amazon basin)? With the aid of the most unappealing 14-year-old computer hacker in existence, Kate takes the case into her own hands, swiftly stumbling across cybercrime, robbery, and a selection of corpses. As the mystery of Joel's disappearance unravels, Krist keeps the pages turning very nicely. What's more, he makes the missing-person motif work metaphorically, as a figure for all of our inherently ambiguous relationships: "What a mystery marriage is," Kate thinks, "any marriage, every marriage. You try to make it good, but you never really know if you're succeeding." Fusing psychological insight with a cops-and-robbers plot isn't easy, but for the most part, Krist has pulled off this bit of literary chemistry with admirable expertise. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.



From Library Journal

It sounds like a thriller?a husband disappears, and the wife trying to track him down discovers that he may be an international drug dealer and a killer. But the folks at Random, who love this book, call it a real genre bender. From the author of The Garden State, winner in 1988 of the Sue Kaufman Prize for First Fiction.
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

31 Reviews
5 star:
 (18)
4 star:
 (4)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:
 (6)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.9 out of 5 stars (31 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
3.0 out of 5 stars Look, Honey, The Dog Is On Fire, May 15 2002
By Robert Derenthal "bucherwurm" (California United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Gazing out into their backyard Kate and Leon note that the neighbor's dog is engulfed in flames. Immediately ruling out spontaneous combustion as the cause of this unusual event, the couple decides that the dog burning is a forewarning of something ominous. Later that same day Leon goes to the store for some microwave popcorn, and never returns. Much later a burglar breaks into the house in the middle of the night. Kate now feels that something is really wrong, and the police, after finding drugs during their search of the house, totally agree.

I thought that this might really be an interesting tale, what with the burning dog and all. Sadly the story never really comes alive. Turns out that lighting a dog on fire is simply a message meaning "See me at once, I have bad news." Clever way to communicate; really beats the risk of using the telephone.

Well, anyway, Kate and her sidekick 14 year old Evan (yes, 14 is correct) take off after the bad guys. Is her husband alive or isn't he? Is he mixed up in some sort of designer drug lab? Are two recent deaths connected to her husband's disappearance? Will another canine be torched? These are the questions that Bad Chemistry sets out to answer. Will the 14 year old kid do something really stupid? You don't need to read the book, of course, to answer that last question.

It's not a bad book. It's just an average one, a modestly entertaining easily forgettable tale. So forgettable that I raced to type this review before the story evaporated from memory.

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5.0 out of 5 stars A Different Kind of Drug Thriller, April 7 2002
By "vrontsky" (Phoenix) - See all my reviews
This is a very cool take on biotechnology and the new pharmacology. Most thrillers about drugs are about the usual recreational kind, but this one is about designer drugs that can change the way you are--that let you, in a sense, choose WHO you want to be. That plays into the character theme of the novel. We can "design" our consciousnesses, but does that mean we can know each other any better than we did before? Krist doesn't think so. The writing is also great here--very smart, interesting. And the two main characters are really fascinating, especially the fourteen-year-old kid, who may be one of the weirdest dudes in contemporary literature.
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1.0 out of 5 stars boring, generic, Mar 25 2002
This book is extremely boring and uninteresting. It is not different, it is the same kind of thing that has been written a million times.
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Most recent customer reviews

1.0 out of 5 stars Like reading an outline for a novel
Okay, follow these steps:
First 80 pages:
1) a murder or a disappearnce forces a regular person to start investigating
2) he/she finds some names

Pages 80-180
The... Read more

Published on Mar 11 2002

5.0 out of 5 stars A More Literary Thriller
It's the white-knuckle thriller that's a cut-above the genre. Great page-turning fun with the surprise of quite excellent writing. Read more
Published on Jun 18 2000 by Mink

5.0 out of 5 stars Great Chemistry
This is a tremendously entertaining novel.. Gary Krist has an excellent ear for dialogue and his heroine is likeable and appealingly flawed. Read more
Published on April 26 2000 by Peter Weymouth

2.0 out of 5 stars Starts promisingly but ends with a thud.
In "Bad Chemistry," Kate Baker is a former cop, nowturned social worker, who has married Joel Baker and moved toWashington, D. C. Read more
Published on April 23 2000 by E. Bukowsky

5.0 out of 5 stars Gary Krist's Bad Chemistry
Gary Krist's 'Bad Chemistry' has an outstanding message within this fine piece of literature. The message is that no matter how well someone knows someone knows someone else,... Read more
Published on Mar 16 2000 by Shea Wallus

5.0 out of 5 stars Gary Krist's Bad Chemistry
Gary Krist's 'Bad Chemistry' has an outstanding message within the literature of this book. The message is that no matter how well someone knows someone else, that they will... Read more
Published on Mar 16 2000 by Shea Wallus

1.0 out of 5 stars Stick with TRUE crime
I usually read true crime, but all the hype on the cover lured me. The plot was DUMB, the characters were DUMB, the language was contrived, I wasn't buying any of it so it made it... Read more
Published on Mar 16 2000 by Ingrid

4.0 out of 5 stars Bad Chemistry
This book kept be turning the pages day after day. I feel guilty for ignoring my kids while taking the time to read it. Read more
Published on Mar 15 2000 by Debra Jean Halcomb

5.0 out of 5 stars Different & interesting.
Krist's style was clean and straightforward, and the plot, hinging on smart drugs, was interesting to me. Read more
Published on Feb 1 2000

5.0 out of 5 stars Packs a wallop!
Gary Krist has created a dynamite character in the person of strong, stubborn, take-no-prisoners Kate Theodorus. Read more
Published on Feb 1 2000 by Sherrie Martin

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