Publisher's Weekly
An art professor and a NYPD police chief discover a stash of money and dope while snorkeling in the Bahamas in McGarrity's absorbing thriller.
Library Journal
Recent Edgar nominee (for Death of a Joyce Scholar , Morrow, 1989, as Bartholomew Gill) McGarrity makes a sharp departure from his usual form with this violent, morbidly fascinating thriller. Six friends on a sailing vacation in the Bahamas come upon the aftermath of a drug deal gone disastrously wrong. Led by a high-ranking New York City police officer, the group decides to help themselves to the millions in cash and cocaine left behind; one member jumps ship to avoid the destruction she knows is sure to follow. The Colombian drug lords unleash a beautiful, deaf assassin to recover their losses, and the body count begins to mount. McGarrity never makes any of the five very sympathetic, and the reader may well be rooting for the assassin. McGarrity does score solid points, though, when he points up the horrors of violence and the amorality bred by drugs. The moral ambiguity of the book's only sympathetic characters--oddly enough, two drug dealers--will make the reader ask whether redemption can, and should, come after so much death and destruction. Recommended for large fiction collections.-- Dean James, Houston Acad. of Medicine/Texas Medical Ctr. Lib.
An art professor and a NYPD police chief discover a stash of money and dope while snorkeling in the Bahamas in McGarrity's absorbing thriller.
Library Journal
Recent Edgar nominee (for Death of a Joyce Scholar , Morrow, 1989, as Bartholomew Gill) McGarrity makes a sharp departure from his usual form with this violent, morbidly fascinating thriller. Six friends on a sailing vacation in the Bahamas come upon the aftermath of a drug deal gone disastrously wrong. Led by a high-ranking New York City police officer, the group decides to help themselves to the millions in cash and cocaine left behind; one member jumps ship to avoid the destruction she knows is sure to follow. The Colombian drug lords unleash a beautiful, deaf assassin to recover their losses, and the body count begins to mount. McGarrity never makes any of the five very sympathetic, and the reader may well be rooting for the assassin. McGarrity does score solid points, though, when he points up the horrors of violence and the amorality bred by drugs. The moral ambiguity of the book's only sympathetic characters--oddly enough, two drug dealers--will make the reader ask whether redemption can, and should, come after so much death and destruction. Recommended for large fiction collections.-- Dean James, Houston Acad. of Medicine/Texas Medical Ctr. Lib.
Used availability for Mark McGarrity's White Rush / Green Fire
See all available used copies of this book at: Abebooks UK or Abebooks US
Hardback Editions
September 1991 : Hardback
| Title: White Rush/Green Fire Author(s): Mark McGarrity ISBN: 0-688-08658-6 / 978-0-688-08658-9 (USA edition) Publisher: William Morrow & Company Availability: Amazon Amazon UK Amazon CA More details... |
Paperback Editions
December 1992 : Paperback
| Title: White Rush: Green Fire Author(s): Mark McGarrity ISBN: 0-380-71097-8 / 978-0-380-71097-3 (USA edition) Publisher: Avon Books (Mm) Availability: Amazon Amazon UK More details... |
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