A Clinician's Brief Guide to Children's Mental Health Law
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The law affecting treatment decisions in mental healthcare for children and young people under 18...
The Finishing School
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How far would you go to uncover the truth? One spring night in 1998 the beautiful Cressida...
A Clean Break: My Story
Christophe Bassons, BenoIt Hopquin and Peter Cossins
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Christophe Bassons is a former professional cyclist. His career was a successful one albeit never in...
The River Cafe Classic Italian Cookbook
Rose Gray and Ruth Rogers
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Thirty years after its doors first opened, The River Cafe remains one of London's most iconic...
A Right to Health: Medicine, Marginality, and Health Care Reform in Northeastern Brazil
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In 1988, a new health care system, the Sistema Unico de Saude (Unified Health Care System or SUS)...
Desert Blood: The Juarez Murders
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It's the summer of 1998 and for five years over a hundred mangled and desecrated bodies have been...
The Wicked Redhead (The Wicked City #2)
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1924. Ginger Kelly wakes up in tranquil Cocoa Beach, Florida, having fled south to safety in the...
Tomb Raider I
Games
App
LARA’S BACK FOR MORE CLASSIC ACTION! We’re going back to where it all began for one of the...
Cyn Armistead (14 KP) rated The Overseer in Books
Mar 1, 2018
If I'd read this book when it was first released, back in 1998, I'm sure it would have been much more chilling. It was quite effective, even in 2011. I can easily remember the public figures who are echoed in Rabb's books - there are certainly similar ones in the news every day right now (some of them the same ones!)
I did, however, enjoy The Overseer for what it was. I didn't find myself chafing at the flaws other reviewers here have mentioned. Yes, government agents in such thrillers have to be nearly superhuman, and the protagonist, in order to survive, has to learn new rules very quickly. But the reader also has to suspend her disbelief, or she has no business reading such things. If the hero is an idiot, I'll accept that he's a slow learner and likely to die - but then he wouldn't be the hero, would he?
All in all, a decent read if you enjoy thrillers.
The Politics of Memoir and the Northern Ireland Conflict
Book
This book examines memoir-writing by many of the key political actors in the Northern Irish...