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LASSITER

Eighteen years after he tossed a lost girl back to the wolves, Miami lawyer Jake Lassiter gets a second chance at redemption.

If she hadn’t been underaged and more than a little stubborn, Krista Larkin would have been just another one of the strippers Jake’s buddy Rusty MacLean hired for his birthday party. But when she refused to get into the car that would return her where she came from, Jake took her back to his place and into his bed. Next morning, when her boyfriend and pimp, porn prince Charlie Ziegler, spotted them together, Jake released her to Charlie, and she promptly disappeared. Now her sister Amy, a Toledo insurance investigator, is looking for her, and she’s convinced that Jake, the last person on record as seeing her alive, knows more than he’s saying. She’s right, of course, and that’s mainly why Jake, who frets, “I could have helped her,” agrees to help Amy look on a pro bono basis. But it’s hard to search through a present-day landscape that so little resembles the past. Charlie Ziegler, long since gone legit, is now a cable millionaire and major philanthropist. His ancient business partner, Max Perlow, has close if murky links to Florida State Attorney Alejandro Castiel. Nobody knows anything about what happened to Krista, even though everyone in South Florida seems to have been present at the last party she attended after Jake dropped her off. A prologue warns that Amy ends up in jail on suspicion of murdering an unnamed man, but it’s not till after her trial ends that rough justice will finally be done. Highly competent work by Levine (Illegal, 2009, etc.), with the usual cascade of surprises at the end.  

 

Pub Date: Sept. 13, 2011

ISBN: 978-0-553-80674-8

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Bantam

Review Posted Online: July 19, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2011

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THE INNOCENT WIFE

A grim and unbearably tense debut chiller with an unexpected and utterly fitting finale.

A lonely British schoolteacher falls for an American man incarcerated for the murder of a young woman. What could possibly go wrong?

Samantha, 31, is still reeling from a bad breakup when she discovers Framing the Truth: The Murder of Holly Michaels, an 18-year-old true-crime documentary about the killing of a young girl by then-18-year-old Dennis Danson, aka the suspected Red River Killer, who’s still on death row in Florida’s Altoona Prison. Sam writes to Dennis, and soon they’re declaring their love for each other. Sam flies to the U.S. to meet him, and although they’re separated by plexiglass, she knows that she’s found the love of her life. The chirpy Carrie, who co-produced and directed the first documentary, is Sam’s guide while she’s there, and Sam accompanies her while they film a new series about Dennis, A Boy from Red River. Sam and Dennis quickly marry when new evidence comes to light and Dennis is exonerated and released. Amid a whirlwind of talk shows, celebrity attention, and the new series premiere, married life isn’t quite what Sam had hoped for: intimacy is nonexistent, the already self-loathing Sam feels unloved and unwanted, and the appearance of Dennis’ clingy childhood friend Lindsay Durst sends Sam into a jealous fit. After Dennis’ father dies, they move into Dennis’ childhood home, and Sam begins to suspect he may be hiding something. After all, what actually happened to all those other missing girls? Refreshingly, Lloyd seems absolutely unconcerned with whether or not her characters are likable, and although a few British sayings ("round," “in hospital”) make their way into the dialogue of the American characters, her research into the aftereffects of long incarceration is obvious, and her portrait of an emotionally damaged woman feels spot-on.

A grim and unbearably tense debut chiller with an unexpected and utterly fitting finale.

Pub Date: Feb. 6, 2018

ISBN: 978-1-335-95240-0

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Hanover Square Press

Review Posted Online: Dec. 23, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2018

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THE WHISTLER

Yes, it’s formula. Yes, it’s not as gritty an exercise in swamp mayhem as Hiaasen, Buchanan, or Crews might turn in. But,...

“I started dreaming of getting rich, which, in Florida anyway, can lead to serious trouble”: another blockbuster in the making from Grisham (Rogue Lawyer, 2015, etc.), the ascended master of the legal procedural.

If justice is blind, it is also served, in theory, by incorruptible servants. Emphasize “in theory,” for as Grisham’s latest opens, judicial investigator Lacy Stoltz is confronted with the unpleasant possibility that a highly regarded judge may be on the take. The charge comes, discreetly, from a former lawyer–turned-jailbird-turned-lawyer again, who spins out a seemingly improbable tale of racketeering that weds the best elements of Gulf Coast society with the worst, from the brilliant legal minds of Tallahassee to some very unpleasant lads once styled as the Catfish Mafia, now reborn in an alt-version, the Coast Mafia. Lacy’s brief is to find out just how rotten the rotten judge is—and the answer is plenty. Naturally, this knowledge is not acquired without cost; the body count rises, bad things happen to good people, and for a time, at least, the villains get away with murder and more. Grisham has never been strong on characterization: Lacy, we learn, is content to be single, “to live alone, to sleep in the center of the bed, to clean up only after herself,” and so forth, but beyond that the reader doesn’t get much sense of what drives her to put herself in the way of flying bullets and sneering counsel: “His associate was Ian Archer, an unsmiling sort who refused to shake hands with anyone and reeked of surliness.” In laid-back Florida? Indeed, and in Grisham’s busy hands, a lot of players come and go, some fated to sleep with the manatees.

Yes, it’s formula. Yes, it’s not as gritty an exercise in swamp mayhem as Hiaasen, Buchanan, or Crews might turn in. But, like eating a junk burger, even though you probably shouldn’t, it’s plenty satisfying.

Pub Date: Oct. 25, 2016

ISBN: 978-0-385-54119-0

Page Count: 384

Publisher: Doubleday

Review Posted Online: Oct. 18, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 1, 2016

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