Orchid Blues | 
enlarge | Author: Stuart Woods Publisher: Thorndike Press Category: Book
List Price: $14.95 Buy Used: $0.47 You Save: $14.48 (97%)
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Rating: 44 reviews Sales Rank: 2776371
Format: Large Print Media: Paperback Edition: 1 Pages: 357 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.3 x 1.1
ISBN: 0783897472 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780783897479 ASIN: 0783897472
Publication Date: July 2, 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available
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Product Description A New York Times Bestseller A team of men hits a local Orchid Beach, Florida, business, and nearly capsizes Holly Barker's life. The small-town police chief vows to find the culprits, who left nothing behind but the corpse of an innocent bystander.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 39 more reviews...
another Woods winner May 4, 2007 Valerie Joan (Montana) Grabs your attention from page one!! Concise writing, good flow of events. Believable - well, most of it but it is fiction, after all!! I feel you can't go wrong with Stuart Woods for an enjoyable read.
Not up to to par, skip this one January 7, 2007 Dave (Henderson, NV United States) Light reading, rather boring, poor character development, defintiely not in line with his other writing.
Orchid Blues....it gave me the blues! January 2, 2007 Nicki in the Burg (Harrisburg , Pennsylvania, USA) I was so excited after reading "Orchid Beach" to read part two of the Holly Barker Novels "Orchid Blues". The first 10 chapters were good and kept me interested, however, after that this book just dragged on and on and on. I mean I thought the novels were about Holly Barker not her father Ham. This book focused more on Ham and him investigating a group of individuals than it did on Holly and her investigative skills. I hope this book doesn't deter me from reading other Holly Barker novels. There were some pretty good points in the book though, some parts I actually really enjoyed, esepcially how Mr. Woods tied in Stone Barrington to this particular story. I loved that! Other than that I felt like this book was a really long read for me and I'd actually have to say it bored me most of the time. I have the next book Blood Orchid, I do hope its a much better book than this one. I'll give the series another chance.
Cheesy, corny, lame, hokey August 19, 2006 Gene Tate (USA) What a terrible story, was unable to finish it, Stuart Woods was at one time a very good author, but when he started with Holly and Stone, he in effect quit writing, this is about a militant band of right wingers robbing banks and oh by the way just had to kill Holly's intended just an hour before the wedding which didn't seem to break Holly up all that much as she still has her best friend, her dog and her father which she has conversations with regarding three somes and their sex lives in general, Signet books and Stuart Woods should both be ashamed of themselves for putting this on the market.
THIS ORCHID DOESN'T BLOSSOM April 10, 2005 Michael Butts (Martinsburg, WV USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
After an impressive debut in ORCHID BEACH, we meet Holly Barker on her wedding day....a day that is destined to become a fateful day instead of a happy one. Woods paints a picture of a heroine who seems more interesting in solving the bank robbery than mourning the loss of the man she supposedly wanted to spend the rest of her life with. In a painfully dreadful narrative, Woods presents us with another variation on the extremist group of fanatics who want to make the US better by getting rid of anyone who isn't white. Been done so many times before, that it's redundant in this tepid story. Woods doesn't offer us anything new and the pacing is so slow, it becomes sleep inducing. Woods also makes the mistake of having Ham, Holly's tough father, carry the weight of the book. While Ham's an okay guy, he comes across as a Dirk Pitt or superman in this one, and it just didn't work for me. The ending is also pretty lame, and even the inclusion of Stone Barrington, makes little narrative sense. A real disappointment; is the third any better???
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