APRIL 2016 - AudioFile
Sometimes the best thing an audiobook narrator can do is be invisible. Thérèse Plummer illustrates this with her performance of the latest Margolin murder mystery. She effortlessly takes on the characters and does her job so well, with such skill, that only upon reflection is it clear how perfect the result is. Despite the fact that there are more than a dozen characters involved in the story, there is no confusion, no question of who is speaking. The audiobook itself is a spiderweb of mystery, a box that once opened reveals another box. Yet, when the smoke clears, all the clues are laid bare, and the solution, in retrospect, seems obvious. M.S. © AudioFile 2016, Portland, Maine
Publishers Weekly
12/14/2015
In bestseller Margolin’s subpar fifth Amanda Jaffe novel (after 2009’s Fugitive), the Portland, Ore., DA decides to defend paralegal Tom Beatty, a veteran with PTSD, after he becomes the prime suspect in the murder of his boss, Christine Larson, whose battered body turned up in Beatty’s bedroom. Then Dale Masterson, a senior partner at the prestigious law firm where Larson worked, is found dead in his home. This time, the assailant appears obvious: Masterson’s 26-year-old son, Brandon, was seen running from his father’s house, covered in blood. After Brandon’s mother approaches Jaffe, she agrees to represent Brandon, an outspoken environmental activist who claims he killed his father to send a message to Big Oil. Unsettling connections between the Masterson and Larson murders put Jaffe in an ethical pickle as she tries to help both her clients without harming the other’s case. Sympathetic characters compensate only in part for an overly complicated plot. Agents: Jean Naggar and Jennifer Weltz, Jean V. Naggar Literary Agency. (Feb.)
From the Publisher
A thriller taking the reader on a gripping journey through a legal minefield, while addressing greed, ethics, psychology, the deepest of human relationships, and truth.” — Huffington Post
“Phillip Margolin is a talented storyteller. He’s got a silky, deceptively simple style that snakes back around when you least expect it and grabs you.” — New York Journal of Books
“Margolin has once again produced a thought-provoking novel that is likely to keep you up late at night.… Don’t miss it.” — Bookloons.com
“A master of plot and pacing-and one of those rare authors who can create a genuinely surprising ending.” — Lisa Scottoline
New York Journal of Books
Phillip Margolin is a talented storyteller. He’s got a silky, deceptively simple style that snakes back around when you least expect it and grabs you.
Lisa Scottoline
A master of plot and pacing-and one of those rare authors who can create a genuinely surprising ending.
Bookloons.com
Margolin has once again produced a thought-provoking novel that is likely to keep you up late at night.… Don’t miss it.
Huffington Post
A thriller taking the reader on a gripping journey through a legal minefield, while addressing greed, ethics, psychology, the deepest of human relationships, and truth.
Library Journal
09/01/2015
A lawyer who's gleamingly lined his coffers by representing oil and coal interests, Dale Masterson is found beaten to death, and ecowarrior son Brandon confesses. But the case falls apart, and defense lawyer Amanda Jaffe (popular with Margolin fans) considers who the real killer might be. With a 50,000-copy first printing.
APRIL 2016 - AudioFile
Sometimes the best thing an audiobook narrator can do is be invisible. Thérèse Plummer illustrates this with her performance of the latest Margolin murder mystery. She effortlessly takes on the characters and does her job so well, with such skill, that only upon reflection is it clear how perfect the result is. Despite the fact that there are more than a dozen characters involved in the story, there is no confusion, no question of who is speaking. The audiobook itself is a spiderweb of mystery, a box that once opened reveals another box. Yet, when the smoke clears, all the clues are laid bare, and the solution, in retrospect, seems obvious. M.S. © AudioFile 2016, Portland, Maine
Kirkus Reviews
2015-10-15
What the title promises is exactly what Margolin (Worthy Brown's Daughter, 2014, etc.) delivers: another torrent of violent crimes for Oregon defense attorney Amanda Jaffe. Christine Larson, of Masterson, Hamilton, Rickman, and Thomas, wants Amanda to defend Tom Beatty, a former Navy SEAL with PTSD who's working as a paralegal at the firm. Harold Roux, a bully who started a bar fight with Beatty, has sworn out a complaint from his hospital bed. Amanda gets the charge dismissed without breaking a sweat, unaware that the real trouble is just beginning. Someone murders Christine, plants her body in Beatty's place, and sends Detective Greg Nowicki, of Portland Narcotics, there on a trumped-up tip that Beatty's selling heroin. The cops pick up Beatty, but Amanda assures him she'll get bail for him, because she's certain Christine was killed by Dale Masterson, Mark Hamilton, or one of the other higher-ups in the firm whose falsified financial statements Christine had been looking into. Amanda, as good as her word, springs Beatty from police custody just in time for Masterson to get murdered. The presumption of Beatty's guilt would be overwhelming if only Dale's son, Brandon, hadn't been spotted running from the murder scene covered in blood. In fact, Brandon, an environmental activist bent on using his trial as a platform to broadcast his father's misdeeds to the world, is only too eager to confess to the murder, but Amanda doesn't believe him, and soon enough she's gotten herself hired as his attorney even though getting him off may involve implicating Beatty, who's also her client. This last problem may sound like a thorny ethical dilemma, but it's just as weightless as every other complication in this fleet, guileless, inch-deep yarn, a tale guaranteed to get you to bed in plenty of time and leave your dreams untroubled.