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Half Moon Chambers

por Harper Fox

Otros autores: Ver la sección otros autores.

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578457,950 (4.18)Ninguno
A cop and a recovering addict - no chance for romance there. Yet Vince, a street-hardened narcotics officer, is having to reassess his life. Six months ago, he hit rock-bottom. A bullet brought him down, and his beloved partner Jack betrayed him. Badly disabled and in constant pain, Vince is flying a desk these days, and it doesn't suit him at all. His world is looking grim when he meets Rowan Clyde, sole surviving witness to a vicious drugs-related killing. Rowan doesn't want to talk. He's vulnerable, trying to hold his own life together in the wake of a crippling addiction. Vince should have no time for him, and Rowan certainly shouldn't trust a cop with an agenda to get him onto the witness stand at any cost. Yet despite their differences, there's an instant pull of attraction between these two damaged men. Their new bond is put to the ultimate test on the tough streets of Newcastle during a dark northern winter, as each turns out to hold the keys to the other's survival - and to his destruction.… (más)
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Mostrando 1-5 de 8 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
What am I supposed to say about this book that hasn't been said before? Well I suppose I could start with: I loved it!

Harper Fox is one of these authors that always takes me on a journey. Often one I hadn't expected. I didn't expect this story to be so....full. Full of action, suspense and emotion. It's not a light or fluffy story. No, it's a gritty, at times fairly bleak tale, that just grabs you and won't let go.

Yet the underlying story is full of romance, and building a relationship under extremely difficult conditions. I had to keep reading until I knew that Vince and Rowan would get the ending they so definitely deserve! ( )
  ShazOV | Feb 10, 2021 |
3.5 stars. Good read, but alot of unnecessary descriptions. Which made for very pretty writing, but I really only got to know the cop. Glad I read it on my kindle so I could figure out what some of the words used meant! (which makes me sound sort of dumb, but I've never seen a few of those words before!) ( )
  vampkiss | Oct 23, 2013 |
I really enjoyed this. There was a lot of angst but it made sense. I'm a sucker for people at rock bottom, particularly addicts. I like real people who've made really poor decisions but who are basically good. I love characters who have had something awful happen to them and they are trying to cope. This has that in spades.

The characterization is excellent. I love these two men and I believe in them both. I love their issues and suffering and how they're trying to make it work. I love that the police captain is real and deals with what's happening as best he can. I love that Jack isn't evil, he's just a man who made some major mistakes. He's a good guy in the end.

The romantic pieces were a little unusual and fit well with the addiction/angst/messed up-ness of the characters. It might not make sense for some people, but it really worked for me.

The pacing is very good, too. There's suspense and intrigue, danger and mayhem, romance and angst, and intense emotion that's played out in actions more than words. I really love that.

One big issue I had was that throughout, Vince is vilified by his family because he went on a raid with his team instead of immediately going out and looking for his druggie deadbeat brother who was missing again. He is blamed for the brother's death. Not fair at all. He had to work, he didn't really have the option of not going. But even if it weren't for that, there was no guarantee Vince would find the man when his own wife couldn't. He was also at the end of his tether at that point about his brother. I'm in the same place with my daughter. It's a terrible, terrible, thing to have to figure out when to stop enabling behavior by constantly rescuing the drug addict, especially when he/she has no desire to change. Second guessing that decision is cruel and unfair.

There was some beautiful imagery. One character reflects back on a sexual encounter with "a smiling golden-eyed man" who had "...taken me into his body and rocked with me until sunlight exploded in my spine."

Nit picks: "Anymore" was written as "any more" a couple of times where it was referring to time. Methadone is not used as a treatment for a crack addict because crack is not an opiate. Methadone is used for heroin and is only used if absolutely necessary because it is more addictive then heroin and almost impossible to get off of. Maybe things are different in the UK but here, if someone goes to inpatient rehab, they aren't out and back at work after two weeks. After surgery someone is described as now having no pain. Well, the pain for which the surgery was performed might be gone, but no one has surgery without pain. The act of cutting into the body does not rest well with the neurons and synapses.

This is a silly thing to like but I was really tickled that when someone says, "I don't care if you're xxx," they use "the Dalai bloody Lama" instead of the usual "Queen of England," or some other typical answer.

Overall, I really loved this book and look forward to reading something else by the author. ( )
  maybedog | Apr 5, 2013 |
I really enjoyed this. There was a lot of angst but it made sense. I'm a sucker for people at rock bottom, particularly addicts. I like real people who've made really poor decisions but who are basically good. I love characters who have had something awful happen to them and they are trying to cope. This has that in spades.

The characterization is excellent. I love these two men and I believe in them both. I love their issues and suffering and how they're trying to make it work. I love that the police captain is real and deals with what's happening as best he can. I love that Jack isn't evil, he's just a man who made some major mistakes. He's a good guy in the end.

The romantic pieces were a little unusual and fit well with the addiction/angst/messed up-ness of the characters. It might not make sense for some people, but it really worked for me.

The pacing is very good, too. There's suspense and intrigue, danger and mayhem, romance and angst, and intense emotion that's played out in actions more than words. I really love that.

One big issue I had was that throughout, Vince is vilified by his family because he went on a raid with his team instead of immediately going out and looking for his druggie deadbeat brother who was missing again. He is blamed for the brother's death. Not fair at all. He had to work, he didn't really have the option of not going. But even if it weren't for that, there was no guarantee Vince would find the man when his own wife couldn't. He was also at the end of his tether at that point about his brother. I'm in the same place with my daughter. It's a terrible, terrible, thing to have to figure out when to stop enabling behavior by constantly rescuing the drug addict, especially when he/she has no desire to change. Second guessing that decision is cruel and unfair.

There was some beautiful imagery. One character reflects back on a sexual encounter with "a smiling golden-eyed man" who had "...taken me into his body and rocked with me until sunlight exploded in my spine."

Nit picks: "Anymore" was written as "any more" a couple of times where it was referring to time. Methadone is not used as a treatment for a crack addict because crack is not an opiate. Methadone is used for heroin and is only used if absolutely necessary because it is more addictive then heroin and almost impossible to get off of. Maybe things are different in the UK but here, if someone goes to inpatient rehab, they aren't out and back at work after two weeks. After surgery someone is described as now having no pain. Well, the pain for which the surgery was performed might be gone, but no one has surgery without pain. The act of cutting into the body does not rest well with the neurons and synapses.

This is a silly thing to like but I was really tickled that when someone says, "I don't care if you're xxx," they use "the Dalai bloody Lama" instead of the usual "Queen of England," or some other typical answer.

Overall, I really loved this book and look forward to reading something else by the author. ( )
  maybedog | Apr 5, 2013 |
I really enjoyed this. There was a lot of angst but it made sense. I'm a sucker for people at rock bottom, particularly addicts. I like real people who've made really poor decisions but who are basically good. I love characters who have had something awful happen to them and they are trying to cope. This has that in spades.

The characterization is excellent. I love these two men and I believe in them both. I love their issues and suffering and how they're trying to make it work. I love that the police captain is real and deals with what's happening as best he can. I love that Jack isn't evil, he's just a man who made some major mistakes. He's a good guy in the end.

The romantic pieces were a little unusual and fit well with the addiction/angst/messed up-ness of the characters. It might not make sense for some people, but it really worked for me.

The pacing is very good, too. There's suspense and intrigue, danger and mayhem, romance and angst, and intense emotion that's played out in actions more than words. I really love that.

One big issue I had was that throughout, Vince is vilified by his family because he went on a raid with his team instead of immediately going out and looking for his druggie deadbeat brother who was missing again. He is blamed for the brother's death. Not fair at all. He had to work, he didn't really have the option of not going. But even if it weren't for that, there was no guarantee Vince would find the man when his own wife couldn't. He was also at the end of his tether at that point about his brother. I'm in the same place with my daughter. It's a terrible, terrible, thing to have to figure out when to stop enabling behavior by constantly rescuing the drug addict, especially when he/she has no desire to change. Second guessing that decision is cruel and unfair.

There was some beautiful imagery. One character reflects back on a sexual encounter with "a smiling golden-eyed man" who had "...taken me into his body and rocked with me until sunlight exploded in my spine."

Nit picks: "Anymore" was written as "any more" a couple of times where it was referring to time. Methadone is not used as a treatment for a crack addict because crack is not an opiate. Methadone is used for heroin and is only used if absolutely necessary because it is more addictive then heroin and almost impossible to get off of. Maybe things are different in the UK but here, if someone goes to inpatient rehab, they aren't out and back at work after two weeks. After surgery someone is described as now having no pain. Well, the pain for which the surgery was performed might be gone, but no one has surgery without pain. The act of cutting into the body does not rest well with the neurons and synapses.

This is a silly thing to like but I was really tickled that when someone says, "I don't care if you're xxx," they use "the Dalai bloody Lama" instead of the usual "Queen of England," or some other typical answer.

Overall, I really loved this book and look forward to reading something else by the author. ( )
  maybedog | Apr 5, 2013 |
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Nombre del autorRolTipo de autor¿Obra?Estado
Fox, HarperAutorautor principaltodas las edicionesconfirmado
Gilbert, TimNarradorautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado
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Ninguno

A cop and a recovering addict - no chance for romance there. Yet Vince, a street-hardened narcotics officer, is having to reassess his life. Six months ago, he hit rock-bottom. A bullet brought him down, and his beloved partner Jack betrayed him. Badly disabled and in constant pain, Vince is flying a desk these days, and it doesn't suit him at all. His world is looking grim when he meets Rowan Clyde, sole surviving witness to a vicious drugs-related killing. Rowan doesn't want to talk. He's vulnerable, trying to hold his own life together in the wake of a crippling addiction. Vince should have no time for him, and Rowan certainly shouldn't trust a cop with an agenda to get him onto the witness stand at any cost. Yet despite their differences, there's an instant pull of attraction between these two damaged men. Their new bond is put to the ultimate test on the tough streets of Newcastle during a dark northern winter, as each turns out to hold the keys to the other's survival - and to his destruction.

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