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hello, darkness
hello darkness
Author: Sandra Brown
Paris Gibson, popular radio show host position is an escape and only contact with the outside world. One listener is brutally threatening a young victim and using Paris as his excuse. Working with a detective and criminal psychologist as a team, they work together to beat a deadline set by the psychpath "Valentino". Read by Victor — Slezak 12 cd...  more »
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ISBN: 468187
Publication Date: 2003
Pages: 12
Edition: Abridged
Rating:
  • Currently 4/5 Stars.
 1

4 stars, based on 1 rating
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Book Type: Audio CD
Other Versions: Paperback, Hardcover, Audio Cassette
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

reviewed hello, darkness on + 13 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 11
This is the type of novel that I love to read from Sandra Brown. The storyline is excellent, the action is wild and the romance is hot!! Readers are snared from the beginning with a sinister phone call to a radio-talk show host, followed by the kidnapping of the daughter of a prominent citizen. And even though you may think you have everything figured out and know who the psycho is - you don't. Not until the very end. The story takes you behind the scenes of a how a radio show operates, as well as into the teenage underworld of sex, drinking and drugs. Although this is truly a work of fiction, I think its a must-read for parents of teenagers because it stresses the importance of communication and keeping close tabs on these young wannabe adults.
reviewed hello, darkness on + 3 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 4
This was one of my favorites by Sandra Brown, I just could't put it down!
reviewed hello, darkness on + 1217 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
Paris Gibson is a radio DJ. One of her listeners blames her for the advice she gave & he lost his girlfriend. He threatens to come after her & does.
The criminal psychologist who comes to her aid is an old flame. The ending will keep you up reading past your bedtime.
wiserightwinger01 avatar reviewed hello, darkness on + 3 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
Not one of Sandra Brown's best, but enjoyable.
reviewed hello, darkness on + 6 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
I've read a lot of Sandra Brown's books and enjoyed them all, but I think this one is the best!! Kept my interest right from the start and I couldn't guess who the bad guy was until nearly the end. Fun read.
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fastfingers avatar reviewed hello, darkness on + 73 more book reviews
One of my favorites. The story is so intriguing and exciting from start to finish. Could not put it down.
reviewed hello, darkness on + 21 more book reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Cue another run up the charts for bestselling Brown (The Crush), who knows just the right mix to spin: a second-chance-at-love theme rocked by the rhythms of families-in-jeopardy and the hip-hop beat of an at-risk teen subplot sure to alarm the most jaded of parents. Her latest thriller, set during a steamy Austin, Tex., summer, revolves around Paris Gibson, host of a late night radio show that dispenses classic love songs along with advice for the lovelorn that turns deadly after a caller takes Paris's on-air advice to dump a possessive boyfriend who turns out to be another regular caller, "Valentino." Refusing to be dumped, "Valentino" makes the girl his captive, phones Paris that he will kill her in 72 hours ("...her death will be on your conscience") and implies Paris may die next. Paris contacts the Austin police and reunites with one-time lover, Dean Malloy, a police psychologist who was also her dead fiance's best friend. "Valentino" 's victim, Janey Kemp, is the missing 17-year-old daughter of a prominent judge and a founder of a Sex Club Web site that arranges illicit parties that Dean's son, Gavin, also frequents, connecting him to Janey's disappearance. Paris and Dean's romance is almost trivial beside Janey's dehumanizing captivity, although Brown's shallow characterizations of Janey and other Sex Club teens registers the only off note in this fast-reading thriller. The adult suspects are better developed: Lancy, an ex-con/janitor/former porn star trying to make good; Stan, a radio employee whose family connections are the only reason he has a job; John, a cop who sees nothing wrong with "hands on" undercover work; and Brad, a sex-addicted dentist. The unmasking of the killer comes with a riveting finale that will leave fans begging for an encore.
Linda avatar reviewed hello, darkness on + 770 more book reviews
Terrific storyline ... I love the characters.
jwigg avatar reviewed hello, darkness on + 39 more book reviews
This was an awesome mystery!!! I was guessing until the very end!! Highly recommended to any and all mystery fans!
MELNELYNN avatar reviewed hello, darkness on + 669 more book reviews
Sandra Brown has done the next to the impossible. She's given us a serial killer, shown us what he looks like, given us plenty of info about him, made plenty sure we know he's a bottom dweller into not quite right, kinky sex. But that's not what is so amazing about this novel. We meet this slug right from the get go, but we don't figure out who he is till the end of the book, so I guess you could say HELLO, DARKNESS is a mystery. But wait, it reads like a pulse-pounding, page-turning thriller. Stop! There might be a touch of romance in it as well.

Nightshift DJ Paris Gibson gets a call from one of her listeners, a guy who calls himself Valentino, just before she goes off shift. He tells her he's kidnapped his girlfriend and he's going to kill her in three days. Paris has seventy-two hours to save the girl. Of course she goes straight to the cops, where she happens to run into Criminal Shrink Dean Malloy, a man from her past.

Paris, Malloy and the police do their level best to track the kidnapper, but Ms. Brown has made it a bit difficult by giving them more than one suspect. Is it Malloy's sassy son, a back-talking, boozing brat who belongs to the same internet sex club as the missing girl? Is it the perverted porno perusing, pedophiliac who yearns to peak under his patient's skirts as he's drilling their teeth? Is it the cop assigned to computer fraud that's been secretly sampling the wares of the girls in the high school sex club? And can Paris and company catch the kidnapping killer before he gets Paris, because you know hes after her, else why did he bother to call in the first place.

The beauty of this book is that I was convinced the bad guy was the dentist, then I shifted my attention to the kid, then the cop, then back to the dentist, and so on and so on. Ms. Brown gives us three suspects, makes them all look guilty, then guiltier. What a great book.
reviewed hello, darkness on + 65 more book reviews
Usually it's painfully obvious who the bad guy is, but I kept changing my mind as to the villain's identity all throughout the book. A good read.
reviewed hello, darkness on + 42 more book reviews
Very good story. Had me guessing as to the bad guy right to the end.
jadaskye avatar reviewed hello, darkness on + 122 more book reviews
Of course this is great listen ! Highly recommended by me
jebsnow avatar reviewed hello, darkness on + 4 more book reviews
Very compelling story. Ending was a little weak but I like her writing style. Good character development.
reviewed hello, darkness on
Will keep you interested!


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