Four Blind Mice

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In my work as an executive coach, I have seen a pattern of consistent blind spots on the part of leaders that dramatically limit their effectiveness. Once conscious of these blind spots, motivated and bright executives take the suitable action to increase their effectiveness.

These blind spots tend to fall into three popular categories, including blindness to self, blindness to others and blindness to opportunity. Because of their prevalence, I have come to call these “the Three Blind Mice” of leadership. Allow me to introduce you to them.

Blindness to self quintessentially involves a gross lack of self-awareness. This gap is ordinarily driven by ego issues, ordinarily an vast amount of self-confidence, or an evenly immense amount of insecurity. The key to diffusing either is to become more self-aware. This may be without apparent effort accomplished through the use of assessment instruments, external coaching and the like. But it always requires being open to the view of yourself by others. This is having little impact said than done, which is where external coaching may help greatly.

Blindness to others stems from an inattentiveness to the needs of those around you and poor listening skills. The effectiveness of any leader is most dramatically affected by those who work for the leader. I call this “grabbing the lever at the far end.” To do so requires that the leader understands the needs of others so that they may be inspired and motivated. Poor listening is the number one enemy to the type of connectedness that leads to inspirational leadership. If you are a leader with poor listening skills, either repair it or be prepared to fail.

Blindness to probability is caused by short term, tactical focus and micro-management of others. The innovative workplace offers myriad competing priorities and a never-ending task list. When coupled with the 24 hour availability of telephone, e-mail and other engineering enablers, the result is what I have come to call “organizational A.D.D.” It is easy to become overwhelmed with data and to miss the strategic forest for the tactical trees. Leaders fall prey to working on the crisis of the day or to micro-managing their workers because they lack the skill and discipline to stay riveted on strategic priorities. This blindness is particularly prevalent in the era of downsized workforces and stressed-out leaders.

Leaders suffer from these dissimilar forms of blindness to varying degrees and in dissimilar combination’s. The good news is that there is a path forward to improve in each of these areas. It begins with getting the right kind of feedback, listening intently and managing the most primary priorities and not the crisis du jour.


Four Blind Mice

On the verge of resigning from the D.C. police force, Detective Alex Cross knows he can’t refuse this case. His collaborator John Sampson has a friend who has been framed for murder and is facing the gas chamber. His accusers? The United States Army. As a new woman in Cross’s life brings him hope in the face of a ravaging loss at home, Cross and Sampson go up versus codes of honor and silence and three remorseless killers. But a larger threat lies in wait: Their controller, a lethal talent who will introduce Cross to new depths of terror . . the last of the FOUR BLIND MICE. (2002)

ReviewIn this latest adventure story from perennial bestselling author James Patterson, Washington cop Alex Cross gets involved in his partner’s effort to save the life of an old Army buddy who’s facing execution for a dreadful and inexplicable murder spree in North Carolina. The Army’s proof versus Sergeant Ellis Cooper, a fancified Vietnam vet, is overwhelming, which isn’t surprising since it’s all been planted by a quartet of killers whose reason for framing the erstwhile hero isn’t revealed until long after they are. The huge mystery is who set the murderers loose, and in unfeigned cliffhanger fashion, Patterson keeps it underneath wraps until the very end. Meanwhile, his general blend of action, violence, fast pacing and uninspired-though-serviceable prose prevail, and will probably do so all the way to the top of the bestseller lists. –Jane Adams

From Publishers WeeklyWith Patterson continuing to move in unexpected directions (his next novel, The Jester, due out in March 2003, is a medieval adventure), it’s a pleasure to see him touch home base with another Alex Cross adventure story this one the best Cross yet. The mice of the title are three homicidal Army Rangers, Vietnam vets, and their mysterious controller; as is popular in the Cross novels, we recognise this much sooner than does the black Washington, D.C., detective, who gets involved when an army careerist, Sgt. Ellis Cooper, an old pal of Cross’s colleague and best friend, John Sampson, is found guilty at military trial for the brutal murder of three women, but claims innocence. Traveling to North Carolina, where Cooper awaits execution, and to Fort Bragg to investigate, Cross and Sampson encounter stonewalling amid the military which only intensifies as they uncover a pattern of other military men executed for like crimes they may not have committed. As the duo visits West Point, they confront an even thicker “gray” wall of silence. Meanwhile, the killers strike again, and when Cross and Sampson discern them, the Rangers start out hunting the cops. The action leads, as is Patterson’s custom, to a firecracker string of climaxes; the finale finds Cross handcuffed and stripped naked in deep woods, with regards to to be killed. Throughout, Patterson expertly balances the conspiratorial action with intriguing developments in Cross’s domestic life, including health difficultnesses for his family’s anchor, the elderly Nana, and growing romance among him and a California cop. Everything clicks in this novel, from Patterson’s patented short chapters (115 here) to the whiplash plotting. This may not be high lit, but it sure is entertainment.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library JournalIn the latest Alex Cross thriller, his partner, John Sampson, takes center stage. A friend of John’s, U.S. Army Sergeant Cooper, has been convicted of murdering three women. The military higher-ups are convinced that it’s an open-and-shut case, but John knows that his friend is innocent. Their investigation is hampered at each turn, as if the army doesn’t care to have the truth revealed, even when Cross and Sampson uncover other military men who were perhaps framed for murder. Meanwhile, the real killers, who are coordinated in covering their tracks and leaving incriminating proof pointing to their targets, discover the investigation and determine to mark Cross and Sampson for extermination. This time around, Patterson’s story is more personal than plot-driven, and there are a lot less plot twists than one normally finds in a Patterson novel. Still, Four Blind Mice is a immense betterment over the former two Alex Cross thrillers (Roses Are Red, Violets Are Blue), which were both poorly written and unnecessarily gruesome, with a number of unrealistic passages. Libraries won’t be capable to keep this new book on the shelves.
–Jeff Ayers, Seattle P.L.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.


Most helpful customer reviews

26 of 27 people found the following review helpful.
4Don’t Believe the Book Jacket Hyperbole but a Good Read
By Tucker Andersen
This is a more than adequate prototypical James Patterson assembly line thriller involving another case for fans of DC Detective Alex Cross. The dialog is simple, the action is fast, the murders are brutal, there is a mastermind to catch, and the chapters are shorter than ever (less than four pages on average). However, I found this book much more enjoyable than the last few Cross books. First, we don’t get so many mindnumbing gruesome details about the murders. Second, John Sampson’s character gets fleshed out and he has a more instrumental role in the story. Third, it was much more a straighforward police procedural and detective story despite a few stupid and unrealistic actions by Cross (including breaking and entering at the home of one of the suspects). Last, I personally was glad that a bestselling author like Patterson addressed the continuing effect of the Vietnam War on many veterans and the ethical dilemmas which they faced, even if this is a very superficial treatment.

As usual, Patterson hooks you through immediate action and the fact you’re several chapters in the book almost before you have begun, since it’s always easy to read another three or four pages. This is no literary masterpiece and there are no long descriptive sections, just the necessary facts to advance the plot intermixed with more than usual degree of involvement in the personal lives of Cross (and his new girlfriend Jamilla), Sampson, and Nana, Cross’ grandmother.

Sampson’s Vietnam buddy, Ellis Cooper, is convicted of a brutal triple murder based on compelling physical evidence. He contacts Sampson from Death Row and he and Cross become convinced that he was framed. As they investigate, they uncover several previous murders where Vietnam vets were apparently similarly framed and executed. We are then introduced to the three killers, a professional hit squad that was a covert assasination team in Vietnam. (Thus, in this book the suspense is more about how Cross and Sampson will trap the killers and why the murders have been committed than by whom or how.) Further murders occur and Cross and Sampson confront the killers but run into hostility from the miltary as they attempt to build their case. The action soon moves to the campus of West Point and direct involvement of the Army, and it becomes clear that there is someone directing events behind the scenes. Kyle Craig (known to previous Cross readers as the murderous FBI agent now in a maximum security federal penitentiary) appears briefly as a confidante of Tran Van Luu, also a prisoner, former Army agent in Vietnam, and leader of the NY Vietnamese gang, the Ghost Shadows.

I found the conclusion more satisfying than recent Alex Cross books, and the explanation for the killings and the revenge exacted for long hidden events a sort of rough justice for all involved. Of course, as usual in Patterson novels a lot of questions concerning the details are left unanswered. For just a few examples, we don’t know how all the evidence was fabricated, why the innocent victims were chosen, or how Kyle and Tran operated from supposedly solitary confinement. This book is recommended for both Alex Cross devotees and new James Patterson readers who want a quick easy read with a plot with a few intriguing twists.

16 of 17 people found the following review helpful.
4Patterson Returns with one of the better Alex Cross Novels
By JC
Every time James Patterson releases a book, readers use this space to complain about his latest work. People who have never read Patterson should understand something: He does not write with the forensic detail of a Ridley Pearson, or develop a plot like Jeffery Deaver, nor does he have the hard-boiled edge of a Michael Connelly. James Patterson attempts to do one thing and one thing only – entertain his readers – and he does it very well.

Four Blind Mice is the eighth installment in the Alex Cross series of books. While this one is not quite on par with Kiss the Girls or Along Came a Spider, it is certainly better than any of the more recent Cross novels, especially Violets Are Blue.

There were several positive aspects to this novel. The first and most noticeable is that Patterson brings John Sampson in for his most fully developed role yet. Sampson is a very likeable character and plays well with Cross. In fact, the Sampson character highlights the better parts of Cross more than any other. The second plus to this book was that the plot is better than it has been in the previous two Cross novels. Although most of Patterson’s plots are unrealistic, and this one is no exception, this one seems more grounded in plausibility than Violets Are Blue, for example. The killers, whom we know are a group of former army rangers less than 10 pages into the book, are much better as villians than Vampires. This only ads to the story. The final thing frequent readers of Patterson’s novels will notice is that the Cross character is fleshed out more fully and from different angles. We get to see Cross the detective, Cross the buddy,Cross the Dad, Cross and Jamilla, and Cross and Nana-Mama. This really helped to give the character a three-dimensional feel.

All in all, this book is worth the purchase, especially for a Patterson fan. It is easily read in one sitting and is a highly entertaining read. If you’re new to Patterson, it certainly helps to read the Cross books in order, starting with Along Came a Spider.

Also Recommended – The Lou Boldt Series by Ridley Pearson, The Lucas Davenport Series by John Sandford, any Jeffery Deaver Book, as well as anything by Greg Iles. For light reading akin to James Patterson, Stuart Woods does the trick.

11 of 11 people found the following review helpful.
4Death Row Killers
By Marc Ruby™
After reading ‘Violets are Blue’, I felt that James Patterson had become locked into a pattern in his suspense stories. At one end of the story is Alex Cross, psychologist turned homicide detective and at the other is one or another variation of the psychotic mastermind. Because this is such a generic formula, one can get a lot of mileage out of it before it becomes noticeably repetitious. However, ‘Violets are Blue’ was not all that well written, and I found myself predicting too much of the book’s events.

‘Four Blind Mice’ is a much better vehicle, although the basic pattern is still present. This time Alex’s partner and friend, John Sampson drags Alex into a case that starts out ugly and then gets very frightening. Sgt. Ellis Cooper, a man Sampson admires greatly, is sitting on death row awaiting execution for crimes that he apparently did not commit. The two detectives pour a tremendous amount of energy into finding the truth, but they can only find shadows and whispers of a pattern of murder and accusation that has led a series of Viet Nam veterans to their deaths.

Again Patterson exposes the killers almost immediately, and leaves the reader waiting impatiently for Cross and Sampson to catch up, while we get to spend time inside the heads of the killers. Even when it is clear that the executions are really assassinations, it is difficult to uncover the underlying motivation. Cross finds himself receiving anonymous messages from someone named ‘Foot Soldier’, who is apparently the mind behind much that is going on. But nothing comes clear easily.

Alex has a lot going on in his life to distract him. He is falling in love with Jamilla Hughes, a detective on the other side of the continent, he is considering leaving his job, and something is not quite right with Nana Mama, who has been most of the stability in Alex’s life. Much to worry about and not many easy answers.

Despite the improvement in narrative, I still find books that immediately reveal the killers less satisfying than those that keep more secrets. Patterson simply does not leave much for the reader to guess, turning this from a mystery story to a pure suspense tale. Whether you will like this or not is largely a matter of your preferences as a reader. I can tell you that the writing is good, the characters are interesting, the puzzle is intricate, and the suspense really is there.

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Four Blind Mice

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Four Blind Mice

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Four Blind Mice

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Four Blind Mice

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Four Blind Mice

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Four Blind Mice

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