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The Unsung Hero by Suzanne Brockmann (Troubleshooters #1) - January 2016 (Spoiler Zone)
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Giulia
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Jan 18, 2016 06:34PM

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I had no doubt Tom had spotted a terrorist at the airport. I just didn't know if he would be able to convince anyone else of what he saw.

I think he had to report it, even if he didn't have any evidence. If he didn't at least try to let everyone know what he saw, hundreds could end up dead.

5. Kelly seems to have grown into a complicated woman. She's a pediatrician with a big heart and devotes a lot of time to her work. Unfortunately, her dad is dying and she wants to be closer to him. What did you think about their relationship as father and daughter?
Robin wrote: "Jonetta wrote: "Tom is on a forced 30 day vacation after his head injury and heads home to Baldwin's Bridge. He doesn't plan to stay long and is itching to get his team reassembled and back to work..."
By the end of the book, what you know of Tom tells you this could never have been a delusion.
By the end of the book, what you know of Tom tells you this could never have been a delusion.


By the time he fixates on this sighting, you hope he has seen the Merchant because the author already has you believing that Team 16 operates as well as it does with him at he helm. You root for him and want him to be right so he can be reinstated at the end of his forced leave even if it means lives will be in jeopardy.

Yeah these were the page I had the urge to tear out of the book. I was really glad for the ebook edtition. I wished I could take Charles and shake him or even better shove him against a wall to wake up. Nothing what ever a person went through gives him or her the right to hurt children the way he did on daily basis.
I think it was really brave and great she found in the end the power and word to voice what's important for their relationship before it was too late. I wish so much I would be able to stand up and talk to my father in a way he would listen - I tried few times but I think I really gave up.

Emerson wrote: "By the time he fixates on this sighting, you hope he has seen the Merchant because the author already has you believing that Team 16 operates as well as it does with him at he helm. You root for him and want him to be right so he can be reinstated at the end of his forced leave even if it means lives will be in jeopardy. ..."
I really, really was hoping he could continue to lead the team.
I really, really was hoping he could continue to lead the team.
Maggie wrote: "I found it interesting that as Charles was driving away in the boat Kelly told him she loved him, but never said anything along the lines of " No don't do this." Was that because she finally got wh..."
I had similar feelings, Maggie.
I had similar feelings, Maggie.
Maggie wrote: "I found it interesting that as Charles was driving away in the boat Kelly told him she loved him, but never said anything along the lines of " No don't do this." Was that because she finally got wh..."
I felt the same way, Maggie. I know that it was his choice, his way to end his battle while saving others lives, but I kept thinking that someone should be screaming No!
I felt the same way, Maggie. I know that it was his choice, his way to end his battle while saving others lives, but I kept thinking that someone should be screaming No!

But yes, if I were her, I would not have just watched my father sacrifice himself like that with no word of protest. It does seem odd that they were all okay with it.

He struck me as incredibly selfish in some ways. He had a major disappointment in his life so he wallowed in alcoholism was an emotionally absentee parent.
And yet we know he was able to maintain at least semblance of a close tie with Joe.
I just always felt so bad for Kelly because she grew up with this distant father who could not give her the sort of parent-child connection she obviously needed from him.
So now at the end of his life you'd think he'd be more reflective and at least try to meet her halfway. But even so he seemed still very begrudging about it. She really had to force the issue to get the smallish crumbs he finally gave her.
I am of the feeling that Kelly made peace with his decision to ride out in the boat because she knew he was already ready to go. Everything they were doing at that point was palliative and any extra time would have been more to their benefit than his. I think at that point she was thinking more like a doctor than a daughter.


I agree Tina. I think Kelly knew her father had only pain ahead of him and he was ready to go. Her training as a doctor told her that begging him not to go would not do him or the town any good at all. He ended up giving up his life but saving a lot of lives.

I think when I read this I didn't really think too much about it. Thought it was the shock of it and not having the time to stop it.

While I liked the look at WWII - I thought we could have less of it. I understand she was trying to show how Charles and Joe became friends and why they are the way they are because of the love they lost but I was less interested in it as a story.
I loved Mallory and David's story and to be honest thought they could have had a YA/NA book of their own. There is nothing I would change about this plot...I did forget a few times that this wasn't just their book when I was listening to a big chunk of their story, lol.
I liked how Brockmann handled the father and daughter relationship between Kelly and Charles...nothing was a big fix but yet due to his illness we were able to see how they were mending.
I liked Kelly and Tom but at times found it a bit annoying when they were trying not to love each other - realistic but annoying, lol.
6. With a reputation for being a good girl, Kelly wants nothing more than to be a bad girl (or known as a bad girl). Do you think she was really a "good" or a "bad" girl? And as an adult, is it really important to be labeled as either?

As an adult, I don't think such labels are relevant but I think that Kelly needed to learn that because Tom's "abandonment" of her when she was a teenager, sort of left her emotional growth a bit stunted. She never got closure. Sixteen years later, she finally does.

I do think this question brings to mind the contrast between Kelly and Mallory and the importance of labelling and perception. Kelly is the "good girl" who wants to be bad. Being considered bad would be a thrill for Kelly.
Meanwhile, poor Mallory is laboring under a trait given to her that she hasn't earned. People think she's "bad". For her being bad isn't a thrill, it is a prison. She would like more than anything to be able to get away from that label and be considered, if not exactly "good" then at least respectable.
Tina wrote: "I don't think even as an adult one grows out of wanting to perceived in a certain way. Labels, especially those imposed upon you during your formative years, still have the ability to affect you in..."
Reminds me of the proverb of the grass being greener on the other side of the fence.
Reminds me of the proverb of the grass being greener on the other side of the fence.


However, I have read one of her later books - THE ADMIRAL'S BRIDE - and it was much better. So, I'm giving her some leeway.
Like other have said, the Mallory and David scenes are great. They really ring true for me.

OK my brain is telling me it's kind of usual way of seeing at it though I can't really relate. Here I can really understand Kelly. If you are told again and again it's wrong to show emotions - espetially in front of people it becomes part of your nature. So even if she would like I don't think she would be able to react any other way than what's so deep in you - especially in a situation of deep emotional upheaval and the more people like Kelly fight it the less it appears possible - at least without some help. It's like a prison within you.

I think it's not only not important to be labeled but even wrong. For one no one like fits only one box we have all different parts in us which make us very unique - in Kelly's example she wasn't only good. And there is also this ugly part that most labels tend to hurt people (even if not intended) and prevent an open aproach and the possibility to get surprised even by friends because we/people don't allow / register it when they behave in a different way.
In Kelly's case I would say Tom expressed it pretty well when she was convinced they have a casual sex-only relationship and he just asked how much experience she has in this area? None :-)
Being always the responsible and caring and whatever left her with little experience in being all the things she thought she needed to be able to have a relationship with Tom - whatever the price - even if it ment to deny her character and her personality. And that was something she tried and didn't manage.

I'm not really sure what's meant by good or bad girl as they seem to have different meanings depending on your age. I think in this context, Kelly had a spotless reputation primarily because she was trying to achieve perfection to get her father's attention. It seemed that she wished that she could just let loose and go with her heart sometimes but once you box yourself into a certain path, it's hard to get others to see you in any other light. Being a "good" girl sexually as a teenager probably served her well. Having that reputation stay with you well into your adult life takes on a whole new meaning in others' minds - maybe (uptight, rigid, repressed), really ugly words and it becomes the negative, which I don't think the same is true in the reverse:)
At least this is what I thought Kelly meant by being a "bad" girl...just being more sexually free when she was old enough to be responsible about it.
At least this is what I thought Kelly meant by being a "bad" girl...just being more sexually free when she was old enough to be responsible about it.

Isn't it the problem of most of the daughters - or at least the first-born daughters. It's in the genes so she had no real choice. OK she's fictional character so there was a choice but still ;-)

Does she walk? Does she talk?
Does she come complete?
My homeroom homeroom angel
Always pulled me from my seat
She was pure like snowflakes
No one could ever stain
The memory of my angel
Could never cause me pain


Again, I'm only a short way in, but she's mentioned a couple of times that showing emotion was not allowed in her family. Her father would say "Get a grip" whenever she lost it as a kid. Sounds like he wasn't comfortable with it and so she learned to bottle everything up and keep it on the inside where others didn't see it.

I don't get why he doesn't seem to care for her. He can care for other people to a degree.... What makes him particularly mean to her?

I struggled with that too but it fit with her character's insecurities at that time. I like how she saw past that facade but took it for what it was, an ego boost that he was paying her some attention.
Mallory's a smart girl and a pretty good judge of character, as shown by her reaction when Brandon abandoned her and Tom at the fairground.

I don't get why he doesn't seem to care for her. He can care for other people to a degree.... What makes him particularly mean to her?"
More so than any of the other characters, I really did not understand Charles at all. I feel as though with the triple storyline, it was difficult for Brockmann to really characterize Charles and Joe well for the readers. The storyline involving their love triangle with Cybele is compelling but doesn't really come to fruition because Charles loved Cybele and she loved him. Joe was kind of taken advantage of and then somewhat akin to a saint because he continued on as Charles' friend in a relationship that lasted longer than the one he had with Cybele.
I'm not sure why he was such a mean drunk unless he was just so discontent with his life. But he was like that before he met Cybele too, so I'm not sure how to gauge his development, if any.
7. Speaking of Charles...The sub-plot involving Joe and Charles during WWII...did you enjoy these flashbacks or find them distracting?



I kind of wish this had been its own book. I mean there is so much about Joe and Charles we still don't know all that much about. Sure, it is kind of funny that Joe is his gardener when everyone who counts know he is so much more. But what was coming back to the U.S. like for them after the war was over? How did they settle into the friendship they had? Did they just never talk about Cybele ever again and play chess? Lots of questions left about them. Not to discredit the book though. It was a great start to this series.


Penni wrote: "That's supposed to be tom and kelly instead of Roma and jelly."
LMAO! It's been awhile since I read this but, these threw me.
LMAO! It's been awhile since I read this but, these threw me.

In the beginning I was just curious and hoped to understand the ambivalent relationship between Joe and Charles which Tom described on his way to Baldwin's Bridge: 'Mr Ashton was Joe's crotchety best friend or arch nemesis, depending on the two old men's moods.' (page 13 or Pos. 232)
After a few of the flashbacks I started to dread them and I think they were one of the main reasons it took me so long to finish the book.