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Spotlight On!! Romance
and Suspense Thriller writer - Catherine Coulter
Catherine Coulter’s first novel
came out at the end of 1978 ýwhen she had just reached puberty. It was
a Regency romance because, as any published author will tell you, it’s
best to limit the number of unknowns in a first book, and not only had
she grown up reading Georgette Heyer, but she earned her M.A. degree in
early 19th century European history.
Following
The Autumn Countess (a Gothic masquerading as a Regency, she says),
she wrote six more Regency romances. Her first long historical appeared
in 1982, her "baby", Devil’s Embrace. She has continued
to write long historicals, interspersing them with contemporary novels,
beginning with False Pretenses in 1988. These days she writes one
contemporary suspense novel a year and one historical romance a year.
She pioneered the trilogy/character-linked
series in historical romance. They include: Song, Star, ýMagic,
Night, Bride,
Viking, and Legacy. She enjoys series because she
doesn’t have to say good-bye to the characters and neither do the
readers.
In 1988, she first appeared on the
New York Times Bestseller List with Moonspun Magic, the third novel
of the Magic trilogy. She has continued to hit the New York Times
Bestseller List thirty-five times in a row, as well as USA Today, Publishers
Weekly, Washington Post, LA Times, etc. She has 36 million copies
in print worldwide.
Hemlock Bay
Book
Description
After five consecutive New York Times-bestselling FBI novels, Catherine
Coulter is a major player in contemporary suspense. "Her suspense
thrillers seem to get better and better," exclaims the Midwest
Review of Books. Hemlock Bay continues the streak. FBI Agent
Dillon Savich is on a challenging case involving the kidnapping of two
teenage boys, when trouble boils up in his personal life. His younger
sister, Lily, has crashed her Explorer into a redwood in California's
Hemlock Bay. Is it another suicide attempt, the second since the loss
of her young daughter some seven months before? Savich and his wife and
fellow agent, Lacey Sherlock, discover that four of Lily's paintings-left
to her by their very famous grandmother, artist Sarah Elliott, and now
worth millions-are at the heart of an intricate conspiracy. Lily and art
broker Simon Russo are thrust into ever-widening circles of danger that
radiate from a notorious collector's locked room.
The
FBI suspense thriller series began with The Cove in the spring
of 1996. The Cove was an instant bestseller and appeared on the
New York Times for nine weeks. In order, the FBI books continue with The
Maze (in which Sherlock and Savich are introduced), The Target,
The Edge, and the newest of this series out right now, Riptide.
Catherine is currently working on the next FBI book, which will appear
in the summer of 2001.
ýThe
Cove Catherine Coulter has written a truly suspenseful romance
in this story of Sally Brainerd, hiding in a small town from the enemies
who killed her father, and FBI agent James Quinlan, who believes she's
the key to the murder..
ýThe
Target Catherine Coulter's sensational contemporary suspense novels
The Cove and The Maze were gripping enough to establish
Coulter firmly in the genre, hailed Publishers Weekly. Now, with
The Target, Coulter again lays claim to the territory where romance
and terror intersect. Hoping to escape unwanted celebrity in the aftermath
of a notorious incident, Ramsey Hunt settles in the Rockies, determined
to bury himself in the safety of a solitary existence. But his isolation
is shattered when he stumbles...
ýRiptide
Rebecca Matlock is in the thick of politics, enjoying her work as
a speechwriter for the governor of New York, who's facing a reelection
campaign. What she's not enjoying are the menacing phone calls from a
stranger who refers to himself as "your boyfriend" and warns
her that he will kill the governor if she doesn't stop sleeping with him.
Although Becca has never had a sexual relationship with her boss, she
is increasingly frightened by the phone calls. The police, who were initially
sympathetic to her plight, make it clear that they regard her as a hysteric,
even after the stalker murders an innocent bystander to convince her that
he means business. Becca seeks refuge in Riptide, an isolated community
on the Maine coast, but terror continues to dog her. The skeleton of a
woman who may be the missing wife of a college friend is unearthed in
the basement of her new house; the stalker tracks her to her chosen refuge;
and she is sought by the police and the FBI following an assassination
attempt on the governor.
With
the appearance of Adam Carruthers, a stranger who says he's her guardian
angel but doesn't tell her who sent him, the plot makes a dramatic right
turn that requires a willing suspension of disbelief. It seems that Becca's
father, a high-ranking intelligence officer, went underground when she
was a baby in order to protect his family from reprisals by a Soviet agent
whose wife he had accidentally killed. Now it's payback time, as Thomas
Matlock calls in his own intelligence community to neutralize the threat
on his daughter's life. All the attendant testosterone speeds up the action
and propels it toward a shoot-'em-up conclusion, but it also sacrifices
a clearer portrayal of Becca's feelings about her father's deception and
abandonment. At the same time, the switch from a damsel-in-distress story
to a high-velocity espionage thriller relegates the skeleton in Becca's
basement to a secondary plot point that is resolved a bit too tidily.
Catherine Coulter is short on character development and explication, but
she weaves a suspenseful web of danger and intrigue, and for her many
admirers, the fact that there seem to be two novels trying to coexist
in one book may not be too much of a good thing.
ýThe
Maze From
Kirkus Reviews
Popular historical romancer Coulter (Rosehaven, 1996, etc.) takes on serial
killers, the FBI, and a wholly implausible cast in her latest venture.
When Lacey Sherlock (supposedly a world-class musician, although this
is mentioned only in passing) becomes a special agent at the FBI, it is
the culmination of an obsession that has lasted for seven years--the amount
of time that's passed since her older, half-sister Belinda was one of
seven San Francisco women murdered by a serial killer. At the time, Lacey
pledged to find him, and now she's prepared to use her insider status
to do just that. She's far less prepared, however, for the feelings stirred
up by her new boss, computer-genius/stud Dillon Savich, who's more than
willing to help her on her quest. When the pair track down the String
Killer, Marlin Jones, they think their troubles are over. Unfortunately,
the case then takes a major turn for the overcomplicated. Marlin may not
have killed Belinda; at the same time, Lacey's family--her father, a judge,
her mother, who's housebound and ``crazy,'' and her former brother-in-law,
Douglas- -also come into the picture. The fast pace will hold some appeal,
but the cartoonish villains and the comic-book storyline may not.
CONTEMPORARY
ROMANTIC THRILLERS
Originally published in October 1988,
False Pretenses was
ýnot only Catherine's first contemporary
suspense novel, but also her first hardcover. Withstanding the test of
time, False
Pretenses has a new cover and a bit of updating, but no rewriting
was necessary for the re-release in March 2000. If you didn't catch
it the first time, or if you're a diehard fan and collector, be sure to
pick up a copy.
First
published in 1988, False Pretenses was not only Catherine Coulter's
first foray into contemporary suspense, but it was also her first hardcover.
Now,
beautifully repackaged for her ever-growing legion of fans, False Pretenses
will once again electrify readers. It is the explosive story of how one
woman must survive the destruction of her perfect life--and the intentions
of three mysterious men....
Praise
for Catherine Coulter's contemporary thrillers:
"Gripping...absorbing....[Coulter] keeps the action moving fast!"--Publishers
Weekly
"Full of twists and turns that guarantee enjoyment."--Rocky
Mountain News
"Engrossing...tantalizing mystery."--Knoxville News-Sentinel
"Vivid...titillating...a cliffhanger to the end...sure to keep readers
turning the pages."--Naples Daily News
"Tense, tightly written...a new genre of suspense thrillers."--Colorado
Springs Gazette-Telegraph
"Coulter maintains tension throughout...[a] shocking climax."--Tulsa
World
First appearing in 1992, Beyond
Eden is Catherine's own personal favorite novel. Updated, and
with an exciting new cover.
From
Kirkus Reviews By the author of False Pretenses (1988), Impulse (1990),
and a series of paperback others: a crammed packaged romance featuring
sex (bad, bad sex), family screaming, a tidbit of mystery, hasty glamorata,
and real love--all set mainly in Manhattan. Lindsay Foxe is the ugly duckling
daughter of Judge Royce Foxe, a mean-as-sleet womanizer who adores his
other daughter, Sydney, a gorgeous Harvard Law School grad now married
to an Italian prince. The 18-year-old Lindsay loves the prince, and he,
unfortunately, loves little girls: Lindsay suffers a ghastly rape in Paris
as a result, a mega misery topped off when sister Sydney arrives, pumps
the prince full of lead, and then, later with dear old dad, blames Lindsay
for leading the prince on. In the meantime, Taylor, the N.Y.C. cop who
heard her crying out in a Paris hospital, surfaces years later, and it's
he who, loving Lindsay, now a famous man-hating model, will help her to
gradually overcome her fear. But there's still a family mystery in the
works, as well as an attempted murder for Lindsay. After this attempt,
when she is injured, assaulters begin arriving as if from a chute: the
still- functioning prince; a bogus doctor; and a hired gun. Taped and
bandaged Lindsay, in her hospital gown, holds her own.... Elementary but
heavy on action Copyright ý1991, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights
reserved.
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