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Showing posts with label Adult Suspense. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Adult Suspense. Show all posts

Thursday, August 13, 2015

The Pelican Brief

The pelican brief. 
The Pelican Brief by John Grisham
Reviewed by Gerti

John Grisham introduces us to a female protagonist in “The Pelican Brief” who must be his ideal woman. Darby Shaw is a brilliant law student at Tulane, so smart in fact that she figures out who killed 2 Supreme Court Justices before even the government does. And that puts her life in danger.

But more than that, Shaw is Grisham’s dream girl, because besides having a first class mind, she is a younger woman who is sleeping with her older and frequently drunk law professor, Thomas Callahan. I sense a little wish fulfillment here, as not only is she brilliant and willing to sleep around, but Darby Shaw is also gorgeous. So stunning that she literally turns heads when she walks down the street, although being modest (as if!), she wears oversized sweaters that hide her rockin’ bod.

Not to take away from the great plot, which has Callahan and his best friend being killed as part of the conspiracy from the White House down to protect the man who wanted the Supreme Court Justices killed just to make more money. Darby is constantly moving and of course outsmarting the government and the virtual mobsters who are chasing her at each turn in order to get hold of “The Pelican Brief”, which she wrote. But like Jennifer Garner in “Alias”, Darby is able to change her identity quickly, dying her hair, moving around thanks to all the money she has, and basically getting help from other fellows who are looking to get in her pants, namely the reporter Gray Grantham. I don’t think it’s an accident that his name sounds a lot like John Grisham, either.

It is a great story, and the suspense level is high. She is being stalked by all kinds of characters, including one of the world’s most infamous assassins, Khamel, who actually killed the esteemed jurists from the highest court in the land. But everyone is so swayed by Darby’s looks, Callahan, Grantham and even “all-business” assassin Khamel, that this reads more like a teenager’s daydream than a classic thriller. Don’t get me wrong – I loved it. But the character of Darby Shaw was so obviously written by a man, and a love-starved middle-aged man, that it is comical and detracts from what would otherwise be a great and gripping story.

Grisham’s writing is as good as it usually is, but I find it hard to enjoy even a thriller like this when the book is so hamstrung by juvenile lusts. I like to think that Darby Shaw could have been a slightly dumpy but brilliant law student, and still written “The Pelican Brief”. But perhaps Grisham wrote the book with the movie version already in mind. Although I had to laugh when Julia Roberts was chosen to play the female lead in the film, and then so obviously didn’t dye or cut her hair (as Darby does many times in the book) to escape the bad guys. It’s just another decision by male “artists” who changed the storyline in order to cater to their vision of female beauty.

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

Gray Mountain

Gray MountainGray Mountain by John Grisham
Reviewed by Gerti



Gray Mountain” is the newest offering by famed legal writer John Grisham. It tells the tale of a well-educated New York lawyer named Samantha Kofer who is forced by downsizing at her huge law firm to head to the wilds of Virginia coal country. Her Wall Street law firm promises that if she works for free at a legal aid clinic for a year, her job may be waiting when she returns. So she does the only reasonable thing, and moves to Brady, Virginia.

Samantha whines a lot about missing life in Manhattan, but she manages to make a home for herself at the Mountain Legal Aid Clinic. It was not her first choice, but the other options for pro bono work have been filled by other “lucky” associates of her firm and others downsized by the 2008 recession. The clinic is run by Mattie Wyatt, life-long resident of Appalachia who knows firsthand the troubles of the region and the people who live there. The two become friends and Samantha learns how to be a real lawyer, preparing a lawsuit, going into a courtroom, and getting caught up in the human drama of the region.

One of the first people she meets in Brady is Donovan Gray, Mattie’s nephew and an appealing but unscrupulous local lawyer. His reason for living is fighting big coal companies devastating the landscape by strip mining, including the land his family owns at Gray Mountain. Donovan takes Sam up in his plane to show her what the mountain looks like after Big Coal is done with it, and it ain’t pretty. But just like she has fears of working for her father, who was a mass tort lawyer before getting disbarred, Sam has problems with Donovan’s do-anything-it-takes-to-win mentality. She finds out he has stolen incriminating documents from Krull Mining. When his private plane crashes and he is killed, the FBI swoops in to try to get them back, but the papers are hidden deep under Gray Mountain.

Sam eventually helps Donovan’s sexy brother Jeff get those papers to another law firm that has been working with Donovan to sue the company for delaying black lung cases. Donovan’s death also has another coal company dragging its feet over paying the million dollar settlement he got in a case against them right before he died – but it was only a handshake agreement and since the ladies can’t find anything in writing, the coal company reneges on the deal. Sam eventually agrees to take the case to the Virginia Supreme Court for Mattie, and in the process promises to stay around Brady for another year or two.

Gray Mountain” really opened my eyes to the problems of the Appalachian region and the games coal companies play to keep deserving miners from government mandated settlement money once they get sick. Big coal companies find it more economical to fight the miners’ health claims than pay them, because the men are rarely rich enough to hire lawyers, and besides, they don’t live long with black lung. “Gray Mountain” has a fascinating cast of characters, an unusual plot and a female protagonist which make this an interesting read.

Wednesday, February 4, 2015

I've Got You Under My Skin

I've got you under my skin“I’ve Got You Under My Skin” by Mary Higgins Clark
Review by Gerti



I’m as irritated as the next guy by the fact that Mary Higgins Clark always uses old songs titles for her book titles, but this book is much better than the title might indicate. It tells the story of Laurie Moran, a TV series producer who has had a bad stretch of luck. Her last two shows bombed, and her husband was killed. On top of that, the killer told her young son that he was coming after him and his mother, too. Fortunately for Laurie, her dad used to be a powerful NY cop, and he retired to watch over his grandson Timmy. The only clue to the killer is that he has blue Eyes, but we don’t find out till the end that they are only contact lenses.

Because of her affinity for crime victims, Laurie pitches a story idea to her boss for a series of shows on unsolved murders. She chooses to start with a doozy – the case of wealthy socialite Betsy Powell, found smothered in her bed the night after a Graduation Gala for her daughter and 3 of her friends. Turns out, each of the girls hated the lady, and each had a good motive to kill her. Betsy was such a witch, though, that other people wanted her dead as well, and hundreds of people were invited to the house party. So whodunit? Old Mr. Powell wants to find the answer before he dies, and so he’s willing to pay each of the girls (now women) $250K to reenact the night of the party at his house – and be questioned by a lawyer.

Laurie’s new show is so high profile, however, that the man who killed her husband hears about it, and he’s ready to put his own high-caliber spin on the ending by killing her. His name is Bruno Hoffa, but of course that’s an alias. He’s pursuing revenge on Laurie because her father, when he was still a cop, put him away for 30 years.

Sounds like a pretty hackneyed plot, but Clark is such a good writer, that this novel really works. Her characters are well-drawn, distinct, and likable, so I found myself caught up in the story. It’s a delight finding out how evil Betsy Powell is, and how she ruined the lives of the 4 girl murder suspects. The only thing I don’t like about this book (besides the title, which doesn’t appear anywhere in the book), is the romance between Laurie and the lawyer who interviews the graduates, named Alex. It is irritating that Clark has to have her protagonists find love in many of the books she writes, but perhaps that’s part of their appeal to many of her readers. Romance novels with mysteries attached, or Mystery novels with a touch of romance? To me, the book would have been stronger if she had left that out. There are so many other juicy relationships going on, the budding romance between Laurie and Alex is the least interesting in the book.

In summary, Clark’s style is easy breezy, and I would recommend this quick and satisfying read to anyone. The characters are great and the plot moves fast

Friday, January 30, 2015

Where are You Now?

Where are you now? : a novelWhere Are You Now? by Mary Higgins Clark
Reviewed by Gerti



I generally like Mary Higgins Clark books, and “Where Are You Now?” is no exception. The plot is wonderful, as it involves the disappearance of a college student named Charles MacKenzie, Jr., called “Mack”. He has been gone for 10 years without a trace, but calls his family every year on Mother’s Day to assure his mother he’s fine. However this year, his sister Carolyn grabs the phone to tell him she’s had enough. She swears to him on the phone that she is tired of this abuse, because he is torturing his family by his absence. And she swears to him that she will track him down this time, which sets a whole lot of dominoes tumbling.

Carolyn decides to go back to the Private Investigator that her now dead father initially hired to find Mack. She also tries to go back through and interview all her brother’s friends and associates from the time he disappeared. Among the most suspicious are his old apartment superintendent and his wife, Gus and Lil Kramer. Lil used to clean the apartment Mack shared with 2 roommates, and is very nervous when Carolyn starts asking questions about him again. Turns out, she was convicted of stealing jewelry from an old ladies apartment before, and suspicion rises that maybe she had stolen something from Mack, which lead to a fight and… more? Gus is definitely a hot head. Could he have killed Mack?

Also on the list of suspects is the “Lone Stranger” roommate, who married a girl Mack used to date once he disappears. He spirits his wife out of town before Carolyn can get to her, and her interview with him is mighty cold. Carolyn had a crush on the third roommate, playboy Nick DeMarco, whom the cops think is responsible for kidnapping another college student recently. So is he good for the older crime, too?

The plot thickens when the missing girl’s cell phone is used, and she claims that “Mack” has kidnapped her. So is that why he disappeared? He had some kind of mental breakdown, and is now some kind of kidnapper/rapist? Carolyn’s head spins with the possibilities. But in the end, she sticks to her guns that Mack is innocent of the crime, which puts her in even more jeopardy from the real kidnap/killer.

I realized early on that one of the people the family knew well had to be responsible for the recent kidnapping, and it turned out that was true. But who it was a pretty neat twist and I found it very satisfying that I had correctly pegged one of the good guys as a baddie, as well as guessed his motivation for the crimes. “Where” is a satisfying suspense novel that will keep you glued to your seat until you finish the last word.