Helpful Score: 1
I really enjoyed this book - it's a courtroom suspense/mysetry. If you like John Grisham, you'll probably like this one. The author wrote Presumed Innocent (movie made with Harrison Ford). I enjoyed that book also. This one was good suspense, not too easy to figure out, made you want to keep reading.
Helpful Score: 1
Will keep you reading!
It was another drive-by shooting in one of Kindle County's most drug-plagued housing projects--but the victim was the ex-wife of a politician. Now this explosive case is about to reunite an unlikely group of men and women who first bonded in the revolutionary fires of the 1960s . . . and show a once-crusading female judge, driven by both her fears and her courage, just how devastating a single wrong choice can be.
Excellent
ANother Turow home run!
One of Turow's best.
Excellent, as always for this author.
Riveting suspense, legal thriller!
A story rooted in the turbulent Vietnam era with concequences in a 1995 murder case. Unusual flashbacks to the 1960's from 1995.
LOVE TUROW!
The ex-wife of a politician is shot in the projects and a group of 1960's friends reunite to oppose a female judge's wrong decision- a courtroom thriller.
really interesting story with some of the usual cast of Turow characters
Excellent book.
Very good legal thriller
Great courtroom thriller about a drive-by shooting in a drug-plagued housing project. The explosive case reunits a group of men and women who bonded in the revolutionary fires of the 1960's.
Adrive-by shooting in Kindle County's drug-plagued housing project. The victim is an aging white woman and her son, a probation officer is charged with the crim. Judge Sonia (Sonny) Klonsky (from Burden of Proof) presides at the trial. There are lots of flash backs to her college years as the defense attorney and a reporter used to be her friends in college.
This book is missing the dust cover.
This book is missing the dust cover.
A little long and there are a lot of character with their own subplots. I had a little trouble with the ebonics but it was a pretty good read.
Splendid..excellent..his best so far. Hair-raising courtroom thriller but also a nuanced story of crime and punishment . A main selection of the Literary Guild and Doubleday Book Club.
It was another drive-by shooting in one of Kindle County's most drug-plagued housing projects--but the victim was the ex-wife of a politician. Now this explosive case is about to reunite an unlikely group of men and women who first bonded in the revolutionary fires of the 1960s, and show a once-crusading female judge, driven by both her fears and her courage, just how devastating a single wrong choice can be.
-from the cover
-from the cover
I'd recommend reading it.
It was a drive by shooting in one of the most drug-plagued housing projects. The victim was the wife of the ex-wife of a politician. Now this case is about to reunite an group and show a once crusading female judge. Driven by both her fears and her courage, just have devastating a single wrong choice can be. Recommended.
It was another drive-by shooting in one of Kindle County's most drug-plagued housing projects but the victim was the ex-wife of a politician. Now this explosive case is about to reunite an unlikely group of mena and women who first bonded in the revolutionary fires of the 1960's...and show a once-crusading female judge, driven by both her fears and her courage, just how devastating a single wrong choice can be.
Amazon.com
At the close of legal-thriller novelist Scott Turow's second book, The Burden of Proof, Sonia Klonsky was a young prosecutor in Kindle County Courthouse with a failing marriage, an infant daughter, and a single mastectomy. Now, as the narrator of Turow's latest novel, she's a Superior Court Judge presiding over the murder trial of one Nile Eddgar, accused of arranging the slaying of his ghetto-activist mother, June. Turow attempts a sort of social history of the 60s in this ambitious mystery, but the most vivid passages come when the gangbangers of the Black Saints Disciples take center stage.
At the close of legal-thriller novelist Scott Turow's second book, The Burden of Proof, Sonia Klonsky was a young prosecutor in Kindle County Courthouse with a failing marriage, an infant daughter, and a single mastectomy. Now, as the narrator of Turow's latest novel, she's a Superior Court Judge presiding over the murder trial of one Nile Eddgar, accused of arranging the slaying of his ghetto-activist mother, June. Turow attempts a sort of social history of the 60s in this ambitious mystery, but the most vivid passages come when the gangbangers of the Black Saints Disciples take center stage.
Great book or gift. Novel.
It was another drive-by shooting in one of Kindle County's most drug- plagued housing projects-but the victim was the ex-wife of a politician. Now this explosive case is about to reunite an unlikely group of men and women who first bonded in the revolutionary fires of the 1960s...and show a once-crusading female judge, driven by both her fears and her courage,just how devastating a single wrong choice can be.
This book was gave to me and I have not read it, and figured someone else would love to have it.