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The Beach House by James Patterson
Features Hardcover
(Large Print)
Amazon.com James Patterson and Peter de Jonge's The Beach House opens with the death of a handsome townie on Memorial Day weekend in the Hamptons, where being a single-digit millionaire is laughable and being poor is unthinkable. Peter Mullen is a high school dropout who parks cars at the private bashes of the superwealthy Barry and Campion Neubauer. When Peter is found dead on the beach, the Neubauers and their friends insist that he drowned, but his brother Jack, a law student who saw Peter's body, knows he was beaten to death. As Jack uncovers evidence of his brother's secret life, he begins to realize that the very rich are indeed different from the rest of us. Revenge is a dish best served cold, and Jack's patiently plotted payback for Peter's death is one that the Hamptons will not soon forget. There are no big surprises in The Beach House, but it's vintage Patterson, with plenty of action, villains with hearts blacker than obsidian, and a working-class hero who pulls himself up by the bootstraps. Patterson and de Jonge previously coauthored the inspirational golf romance Miracle on the 17th Green, but this new game of money, mayhem, and murder clearly suits them to a tee. --Barrie Trinkle
Reader Reviews
Worth Reading, July 16, 2003
Reviewer:
svolk
from Placerville, CA USA
BEACH HOUSE is an easy read, fast paced with snappy dialogue, and a couple interesting characters, especially "grandpa". The plot's not really that original - rich guy with powerful lawyer and corrupt cop cover up the murder of the hero's brother. Hero sets out to avenge brother's death. The cast of characters is curiously homogenized with something for everyone. A gay guy that is, of all things, a hair stylist, a contract killer (who happens to get killed himself), a strong, smart female investigator, a corrupt cop, a whimpy, forlorn father, but a tough-as-nails grandpa, and a brother you didn't REALLY know all that well, among others. There's straight sex, gay sex, incest, pedophilia...you name it. Somehow it all seems to work pretty well in this easy to read novel. I didn't care that much for the "solution"...seemed a little far fetched. Some, however, will call it justice, and that's what this book is all about.
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