Thursday, December 15, 2016

The Latest Thriller From John Grisham THE WHISTLER

 Tainted Judge. The Mafia. Indian Casinos. The Most recent Thriller From John Grisham.




There’s practically nothing boneheaded or unsophisticated about the judicial bribery scam at the center of Grisham’s fascinating new book. Set in the Florida panhandle, “The Whistler” focuses on an complex conspiracy including an Indian reservation, an organized crime syndicate and a crooked judge skimming a small fortune from the tribal casino’s monthly take.

Grisham’s heroine is Lacy Stoltz, an detective for Florida’s judicial conduct board whose most fascinating case, after nine years on the job, has been ousting a crooked judge who preyed on women with divorces on his docket. But Stoltz’s career receives a jolt when a dishonest mole, looking to accumulate millions as a whistle-blower, tips her off to the conspiracy theory.

Grisham has been belittled for not writing powerful female characters, but Stoltz is finely sketched: “The truth was that, at the age of 36, Lacy was content to live alone, to sleep in the middle of her bed, to clean up only after herself, to make and spend her own money, to come and go as she pleased, to follow her career without worrying about his, to plan her evenings with input from no one else, to cook or not to cook, and to have sole ownership of the remote control.”

The judge is also a woman — Claudia McDover, a previous small-town lawyer with a liking for Chanel handbags, Picasso lithographs and private planes. Suspiciously, these expensive tastes emerged only after she’d overseen the land-use litigation that eased the development of the tribal casino. She also presided over the murder trial of a Native American opposed to gambling on the reservation. Now on death row, he insists he was framed.

Grisham followers searching for courtroom dilemma might be disappointed by “The Whistler,” since McDover’s debatable cases are glossed over. The book feels more like the first half of an instance of “Law & Order,” with much of the story targeted on Stoltz and her crime-fighting squad as they snoop around gated residential areas and golf courses, chasing a basket of Florida deplorables who would make Carl Hiaasen extremely pleased.

As ever, Grisham sprinkles “The Whistler” with sharp findings about lawyers. He describes one as a “ham-and-egg street hustler with two billboards to his name, and a practice that yearned for lucrative car wrecks but survived on workers’ comp and midlevel drug cases.” Or this, which rings true: “Lawyers could generally be trusted to keep secrets that include their own clients, but were often terrible gossips when it came to everyone else.”






Wednesday, December 7, 2016

Cross the Line by James Patterson Alex Cross is good again

Shots ring out in the earlier morning hours in the suburbs of Washington, D.C. When the fumes clear, a well known police official sits dead, leaving behind the city's police force striving for answers. Under demand from the mayor, Alex Cross steps into the control vacuum to break the case. But before Cross can make any headway, a ferocious crime wave sweeps across the district. The deadly scenes share only one common thread—the victims are all criminals. And the only thing more risky than a murderer without a conscience, is a killer who thinks he has justice on his side. As Cross goes after an adversary who has appointed himself judge, jury, and executioner, he must take the law back into his own hands before the city he's sworn to protect descends into utter madness.

Cross the Line

Cross the Line by James Patterson, the twenty-fourth book in the Alex Cross collection, is for die-hard followers of the sequence. As a long-time admirer of bestselling author James Patterson and a large, large lover of the Alex Cross collection, I’m pretty ecstatic about each new release and wanted each new chapter in the series to be a great one. I have been dissatisfied with some while most have kept me interested, and satisfied. And this latest inclusion to the series is a well-crafted one where our main character faces a complicated task with a crime wave sweeping all over Washington, DC.

In this newest Alex Cross thriller, a mystifying crime wave hits Washington, DC, with a high-ranking police official ending up as one of the victims. The police department is caught groping in the dark. Alex Cross and his wife Bree team up to find the killer. But both husband and wife finds their selves at odds at critical juncture, thereby impeding their work. When a vigilante group strikes with disastrous consequences, Alex Cross knew he has to tread meticulously and rapidly before it is too late. In due course Alex Cross’ sharp mind sees a pattern in the method of the killers focusing on victims who might have actually broken the law.

Cross the Line by James Patterson published in his true signature style is one that you just can't put down once you begin it. I loved the setting, the portrayal and the premise of the story. The book wrangles together what I would have considered a weird medley of plot themes – murder, mystery, domestic issues, vigilante, and unsolved crimes. This book has got two things right - a terrific plot and strong characters. It is interesting to see the ongoing growth of the characters in the series, which is a welcome sign that James Patterson has no intention of bringing it to an end. And I can’t seem to have enough of Alex Cross!






Thursday, December 1, 2016

Turbo Twenty-Three: A Stephanie Plum Novel (Ranger had a big part in this book)

This book was so enjoyable - chuckle out loud fun - that I disliked to see it end! I love this author and I really like this series! If you are looking for something with deep significance, and hidden messages, this is not the book to read. But, if you want a light-weight, fun, and pleasurable read, this is your book! I laughed so hard from the beginning to the very end!




There aren't enough superlatives in the English language to explain how much I Iove Stephanie Plum novels narrated by Lorelie King. Evanovich is the funniest writer alive and Lorelie King is brilliant! She brings every nuance of humor out of the dialogue. Her characters are so vivid and well defined that you forget this is just a book and not real life. I highly recommend it.