For a crime novel, this novel was remarkably uninteresting. I read a lot of crime and mystery novels, and I was extremely disappointed with The Front.
While the main character, Win, is a good character, I found the other characters to be rather predictable and dull. Stump was a great character, and her relationship with Win is a good one. Lamont, however, is rather one-dimensional, because everyone's opinions of her are told to you while very little is shown. Lamont assigns Win to investigate a cold case, and even the cold case was predictable and easy to solve. The current case that has everyone all mixed up is even more straightforward. I was not in the slightest bit surprised at the "surprise twist", or when Win made any realizations about the case.
Sometimes an easy read is a good thing, and I appreciate a simple book from time to time. What made this book particularly frustrating for me was Cornwell's habit of using incomplete sentences constantly. She shows almost nothing from her characters' point of view, instead relying on brief, jarring sentences of description that could belong to any bystander and seem of little relevance to the characters or the story aside from providing an extremely brief description of the surrounding area. It was even more frustrating to read these sentences when they *were* meant to be relevant to a character. I won't quote the book word for word, but sentences generally looked like this: "Took some Aspirin, had one of the headaches from a lack of sleep or not eating enough." I cannot tell if that was supposed to be an attempt at removing filter words, or if it is just bad writing.
I have not read any of Cornwell's other novels, and I don't think I will in the future. Between her lack of character development, extremely predictable plot, and her incomplete sentences, I cannot say that her writing is something I enjoy.