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Book reviews for "Shubin,_Seymour" sorted by average review score:

The Captain
Published in Paperback by Creative Arts Book Co (01 March, 2000)
Author: Seymour Shubin
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One of Shubin's best
At seventy-six, former Captain of Detectives Walter Hughes is shipped to the home by his children, who complain he is too depressing and too confused. THE CAPTAIN hates his new residence, but none of his children will take him back into their home.

Over time, THE CAPTAIN begins to loathe staff members who mistreat and abuse the elderly patients. He manages to obtain his gun and decides to take an active role as an avenging angel. His first victim is Nurse Kay Latimer, who he feels is nasty and malignant. He next kills landlord Leonard and his spouse for cruelly evicting senior citizens. The police and the media search for a serial killer, but no one would suspect the helpless Captain.

THE CAPTAIN is a reprinting of a classic who-done-it that centers on elder care, a very pertinent issue for baby boomers. The story line is crisp and exciting as THE CAPTAIN takes things into his own hands to revenge abuse and neglect even as no one suspects he is capable of being the killer. Seymour Shubin's story still sends shock waves up and down the reader's spine as it retains, perhaps even more so, its freshness.

Harriet Klausner

Couldn't Put The Captain Down
THE CAPTAIN by Seymour Shubin: Review

As I've become older, it has been increasingly rare that a mystery novel holds my attention beyond a chapter or two. Usually I give up and try something different. Often when goaded, with the promise that the "good stuff" is yet to come, I push on, sometimes happy that I did, more often disappointed. THE CAPTAIN is not one of those books. When Seymour Shubin's THE CAPTAIN arrived, ill-timed though it was amid the confusion of tax preparations, once I started reading I honestly could not put it down. As a mystery writer of sorts myself, I'm impressed, perhaps amazed, at Seymour Shubin's mastery of shifting points of view. Not only do we see the story from different visual perspectives, we are privy to the thoughts of such broadly dissimilar characters as doctors and patients, cops and victims. But Shubin doesn't stop there. Instead, he takes us into the very soul of the characters so that we, the readers, can walk away with an understanding of the motivation behind their conduct, no matter how repugnant, reprehensible, or superficially good. The novel's real strength, however, lies in area that has become somewhat neglected in contemporary mystery writing. Theme. Shubin takes uncommon risks by writing about a subject few of us wish to even think about. He does so with compassion and skill. Without going into details, I will only say that once you've read THE CAPTAIN you may decide to cash in your long-term care policy. And finally, just when you think there will be no more surprises, the knockout final sentence, which sums up what THE CAPTAIN is really about, will leave you thinking about it for a long time to come. Publisher's Weekly had this to say about THE CAPTAIN, "A towering novel that builds to a heart-clutching peak and leaves one profoundly affected." Which may or may not tell you anything; but this I can say for sure, once you read Shubin's novel, you will never forget The Captain.


The Man from Enterprise: The Story of John B. Amos, Founder of Aflac
Published in Hardcover by Mercer University Press (1999)
Author: Seymour Shubin
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Fantastic Book
This is a great book about the life of a great American. If you have doubts and fears about seeing your dreams become realities, this book will be very encouraging for you. I now work for the company John Amos founded (AFLAC), and I assure you, that your life plans can be changed by learning his life story.

I thought this book was great!
This book is one of the best book's I've had the pleasure of reading. What a great American!


Fury's Children: A Novel of Psychological Suspense
Published in Hardcover by Write Way Publishing (01 June, 1997)
Author: Seymour Shubin
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Don't get a teenager angry-there wil be hell to pay
Downsizing the work force is a fiscal reality when a corporation is in trouble, but there are also personal repercussions to the individuals laid off that is rarely addressed. Firing impacts more than just the employee. It effects the family and even the community. Some people have been noted to take extreme measures when confronted with a firing. A rebellious nineteen year old female decides to even the score when her father is laid off and falls into a state of apathy. Terri, who both despises and loves her dad, decides to kill the CEO of the company that destroyed her father. ....Terri is assisted in her vendetta by her boyfriend, Danny, a laid off mechanic, who will do anything she wants as long as she remains his significant other. They succeed in their quest, but this killing fails to satiate Terri's need for vengeance so she chooses another victim who harmed her in the past. He also happens to be the executive who has plans to fire much of his work force, including her father. As America cheers the ".22 Killer", a psychological advice columnist starts putting the pieces to the murders together, even as it places his own life in jeopardy. ...... FURY'S CHILDREN is a mood piece that relies more heavily on the introspective thoughts of the characters than the actions they take. The murders are used as a visual tool to demonstrate the spiraling descent into lunacy that the rebellious teen takes as she crosses the line. Seymour Shubin delivers a chilling novel of psychological suspense, made even more frightening by the fact that the perpetrator wears the mask of sanity that fools everyone. .....Harriet Klausner


The Good And The Dead
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Worldwide Mystery (2002)
Author: Seymour Shubin
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Gripping and deadly nostalgia
Seymour Shubin, author of this engaging novel, has been an Edgar finalist. It's understandable when you read this, his eleventh novel. Here is a story that will tap the nostalgia factor in every reader. Here is a story that crawls inside our hearts, that has us nodding in vivid recall as we walk with writer Ben Newman back down the streets of time, into his childhood.

Here is a story that from the first chapter catches at our fading memories. And something more. Because the mind works in strange ways, many times suppressing or erasing the bad times, the things we did as a child of which we are ashamed, or a little mbarrassed about. If we pick at those memories, sometimes what we discover, is that the reality of those events of years ago are not exactly what we remember.

And sometimes, sometimes, participants in those old memories come back to haunt us. From the very beginning, Shubin's prose takes us first by the hand, and then by the throat. Ben Newman returns to his old neighborhood when his brother's wife dies in a tragic accident. As the spiral tightens and mistakes and missteps by Ben's brother bring police focus to the possibility that the woman was murdered, Ben begins a voyage of discovery. It's a voyage with increasing tension and suspense because Ben begins to discover that perhaps the woman was murdered, not by her husband, Ben's brother, but by someone from Ben's elementary school past. And it appears a killer is stalking Ben's former classmates in an effort to repay an old debt.

The book is properly called psychological suspense, and it is a thriller. Anyone who reads this engaging novel will come away with a different understanding and perhaps an altered perspective on their golden youthful days in elementary school.

A telling Tale
He has written many true crime stories for various magazines and has had one book published, but he never expected to be more than an observer on a homicide case. He revises his assessment when his brother calls to tell him that the police think he killed his wife. Ben Newman knows his sibling is not a murderer.

At his sister-in-law's funeral, Ellen Strickland informs Ben that an old classmate of theirs, Gerry Havers committed suicide three weeks ago. The next day, Ellen is found dead from a supposed car accident. Another classmate soon dies too. Ben concludes that someone has targeted his elementary school class and he feels he must discover who is the culpriit before anyone else dies.

Seymour Shubin is a gifted storyteller who creates a chilling psychological suspense tale. The tension builds in this work to a degree that readers will feel they ran a three-minute mile by the time they reach the finish line. Mr. Shubin turns his villain into a pitiable person rather than a hard-core evil soul, which leads to conflicting emotions on the part of the audience. No one will complete the novel feeling dissatisfied except with the fact that there is no more pages to read.

Harriet Klausner


A Matter of Fear
Published in Paperback by Koenisha Publications (01 October, 2002)
Author: Seymour Shubin
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exciting medical thriller
For five years Tom Loberg worked as a writer in the promotion department of pharmaceutical company Packer-Hill Laboratories until a key patent expired and nine hundred employees including Tom received a pink slip. Unemployed for three months, Tom accepts a position as an editorial writer at Mallory & Mallory medical publishing firm. Tom works for nasty Sam Glennie at the vanity-press division of the company.

The insecure and offensive Sam alienates subordinates, as he fears one of them will take his job. However, he loses his position in a more dramatic style as his corpse is found floating in the Pawtoni River. The police lean towards suicide, but Tom thinks otherwise after going through his boss' files and finding implications that murder might have occurred. Unable to resist, especially when his former employer shockingly offers him work, Tom makes inquiries that lead to more people dying to keep a deadly secret silent.

Though very typical of the medical conspiracy novels, A MATTER OF FEAR is an engaging amateur sleuth tale because readers will like the stubborn high morality of the hero. In spite of the plot not being any different than the usual pharmaceutical company hiding the results of the latest miracle drug that cures by killing, the story line engages the audience who root for Tom to uncover the truth. Because of Tom trying to do the right thing, conspiracy buffs will enjoy Seymour Shubin's tale of medical chicanery.

Harriet Klausner

Top-Notch Read
With A Matter of Fear, Seymour Shubin has produced one of his finest and most compelling novels. To say that he has outdone himself would be to imply he has gone beyond some of his other fine works, but of course that's impossible. However, A Matter of Fear will certainly rank high on anyone's list of Shubin's best, along with his Edgar-nominated The Captain. Let's say that he at least equals his other literate and compelling crime novels here.

In a 1970s era setting, Tom Loberg, age 28, lands a job with a vanity arm of a medical publishing house. The imprint issues books the editors don't think will sell particularly well, but that doctor authors will pay to have in print. Tom, though he doesn't like the job or respect his supervisor Sam Glennie, is glad to get a position that will possibly lead to better editorial jobs elsewhere. In the meantime, he meets a girl and falls in love--and acquires a manuscript through her connections. All is day-to-day routine at work until Tom's boss Glennie turns up drowned in the river--a suicide. But maybe not. Maybe Glennie had every reason to live. When Tom begins to think the death was murder, he tries to work out who and why against a peculiar background filled with odd, yet thoroughly believable characters.

Shubin's greatest gift to his readers with this book is his authenticity. The realness of his people and their environment set fire to the suspense, and we, along with Tom, feel for Glennie and the bereaved wife and want to find out how such a thing could have happened. We're carried along right with our protagonist in no uncertain terms. Tom is purely sympathetic, from his reactions to his job, to his growing relationship with Tina, to his identification with Glennie whose life was sucked dry by this terrible workplace.

Tom is a wonderful character, a young man who is wise to the world and growing weary, but who can be caught by the genuineness of a new love and who has a wonderful sense of humor he isn't afraid to exercise.

Shubin, who has had many prior successes, has triumphed with this one, the pages of which readers will scarf up like potato chips. This is a fast and riveting read, different from the numerous pre-plotted stories that have proliferated in the marketplace over the last decade or so. I would definitely suggest this one to real crime fiction fans. No, it's not a cozy, nor is it hardboiled--neither cats nor bloody corpses spoil the fun. G. Miki Hayden, author of Writing the Mystery, a Macavity winner and Agatha and Anthony nomination.


My Face Among Strangers: A Mystery
Published in Hardcover by Write Way Publishing (01 February, 1999)
Author: Seymour Shubin
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Entertaining tale of suspense

After spending a day at her mother's house in Buffalo, Matt and Laura Kern return to their New Jersey home. However, to their shock, they find that someone broke into the place. Though trashed, very few things seem missing, making Matt wonder why. Matt reflects back to three years ago when Laura and him, and their buddies Vic Caprutti and his girl friend Stacey concocted a scheme. They advertised in a Philadelphia based tabloid: "I will send you my picture for $3.00 ..." Matt thinks the break-in is tied to that previous stunt.

Matt soon learns that Vic is missing. This frightens him as Vic would never disappear on his twin daughters. Matt goes back to the old file containing everything related to that silly advertisement including nasty letters. He begins his own investigation, not knowing the danger that awaits him until he learns that an assailant murdered Vic.

MY FACE AMONG STRANGERS is a strange, but intriguing tale that readers will enjoy due to its mounting suspense. The relationships to Matt of the two prime women in his life seems a bit stretched and unreal. Still, the characters as individuals and their other relationships remain well defined. However, it is the simple story line that grows in tension until the reader feels they cannot cope with any more, only to realize that Seymour Shubin propels the audience further into his grip. Amateur detective fans will quickly recognize Mr. Shubin's name for providing interesting, seemingly mundane, yet entertainingly different tales impacting "Everyperson".

Harriet Klausner

A suspenseful mystery
My Face among Strangers is the gripping story of a prank that comes back to haunt those who took part in it. Matt Kern has all but forgotten about the youthful joke that he and his best friend played so long ago, when his house is broken into and he is forced to remember. When his friend turns up dead, Matt realizes that he's going to have to do some investigating.

Shubin is a highly talented writer and this novel proves that once again. Look for his other books as well- Anyone's my Name, Never Quite Dead, and The Captain are all excellent reading choices.


Anyone's My Name: A Novel
Published in Paperback by Creative Arts Book Co (01 May, 1998)
Author: Seymour Shubin
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Good intentions are not enough
The central idea of this novel is interesting enough: an ordinary man, very much on the side of the "decent people," unable to understand how it is to be on the other side, the side of criminals and outcasts, until he finds himself precisely there, rejected by a society that will not listen and that prefers to view his tragedy in simplistic terms: in this case, that he is a blood-thirsty, lust-driven monster, rather than accepting that he is just a weak man whose only sin was lack of courage, just like so many other men. However, the tone in general is too didactic and in most of the book lacking in sincerity. The author is trying too hard to demonstrate something, and it shows. Only the final part is (and only occasionally) candid and moving, but, alas, too brief. The author takes his time describing the circumstances that lead Paul to his crime, his feelings of remorse and his attempts to escape afterwards, but the end, the epiphany of how it is like to be one of the characters he described too shoddily in his true-crime articles, is too quickly resolved, as if it was too intense for the author to handle. This does not mean that the book is not worth reading; it is fast-paced and quite absorbing, but I just couldn't help comparing it with other, better and less self-conscious books about the world seen through the eyes of a criminal.

Anyone . . .
First published in 1953 and reissued in 1998, ANYONE'S MY NAME explores the dark side within us all perhaps as well as any novel written during those 45 years. As the story unfolds, author Seymour Shubin deftly unveils the gradual changes that affect the narrator's personality as events and his own actions conspire against him. The dire consequences arising out of individual judgment, or lack thereof, move Paul Weiler inexorably toward a totally unexpected (in his view) and ultimate fate. First time around, ANYONE'S MY NAME made the New York Times best seller list. One good reason likely springs from the fact that Shubin has written a novel without a single chink in its tightly controlled first point of view. Contemporary writers would do well to study and learn from Shubin's technique. The story's power, however, is contained within the word, "anyone" in the title. Although it is natural to ask ourselves, "How could Paul Weiler be so stupid?" the novelist's skill shows that our smug small lives are far more fragile than we think. ANYONE'S MY NAME illuminates the truth in the saying, "There but for the grace of God go I," as we come to realize that what happened to Paul Weiler really could happen to anyone."

A brilliant literary crime thriller
In the early 1950s, Paul Simons writes true detective stories even as he yearns to become a great writer of higher quality work. He is tired of writing at a twelve year old's readability level. His spouse Ginny also desires for Paul to scribe better stuff than the trash he always seems to be writing. She loathes his detective stories, not understanding that they pay the bills.

As Paul digs deeper into the weird world of the killers he writes about, he himself begins to emulate the behavior of his subjects. Soon Paul becomes the target of a police man hunt. However, his descent does not become complete until a writer of true detective stories wants to tell Paul's story to the world.

Originally published in 1953, ANYONE'S MY NAME was written over a decade before the Supreme Court's Miranda ruling. However, unlike many of the books and movies of that era, this novel not only holds up well in the nineties, it feels as if it has been written from today's headlines. Readers have the rare opportunity to see what makes a killer tick before, during, and after the fatal event. This novel is not just a good detective story, it is a great criminology tale that uses the psychology and philosophy of murder as its basis. If you have not had a taste of Seymour Shubin, one of the all time greats, try this novel. Subsequently, the reader will clamor for more of his literature.

Harriet Klausner


Never Quite Dead
Published in Hardcover by St. Martin's Press (1989)
Author: Seymour Shubin
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A mystery with murder, deceit, and, surprisingly, heart
In David Kyle, Shubin has created an everyman detective. Adopting his deceased father's independent investigation of a young boy's murder, Kyle is initially driven by the guilt he feels for never taking interest in his old man's career-spanning passion for the case. Before long, though, the pursuit for the truth grabs hold of Kyle the way it did his father. Guided more by his heart and instinct than true investigative know-how, Kyle learns all he can of the boy and his mother but can't piece together the murder until the antagonists break down and slip up at book's end. With Kyle, Shubin gives us a compassionate hero in a cold world during a cold time. Shubin excels in his depictions of this setting. He elegantly speaks of the horror in choosing the easy path in life, the pain of a ravaged conscience, what it means to lose a loved one, and the loneliness of a pursuit that only the pursuer understands.

With a tragic enough plot, frighteningly conscience-ravaged antagonists, a relatable hero in David Kyle, and a terrifying climax, Never Quite Dead works as a novel. It is, in fact, a good book. As a murder mystery, it takes a misstep, though. Shubin parallels Kyle's story with the story of the party that is responsible for the murder. However, clues are not presented in a linear fashion and the facts of the murder do not become increasingly apparent throughout the story. Three-quarters of the way through the book, the reader's knowledge of what happened that night is limited to what he/she knew in the first fifty pages of the book. Until final confessions, in fact, the reader knows only which characters are, in some vague way, involved in the death of the boy. Never Quite Dead is at once cold and desolate and again passionate and reaffirming. Ultimately, it is a gratifying read.


Holy Secrets
Published in Paperback by Pocket Books (1984)
Author: Seymour Shubin
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Remember Me Always
Published in Paperback by Berkley Pub Group (1994)
Author: Seymour Shubin
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