Book Review--"Please Take My Heart" by Mary Higgins Clark

Two years ago, a young acclaimed actress is returning to New Jersey from Cape Cod. She is deeply troubled. Several days ago, she saw a man nicknamed "Jess," who seems to be the same man her roommate, murdered 15 years ago, had for a lover. She also may be worried about her ex-husband, who may be stalking her.
When she returns to her house, she sees an intruder, who shoots her several times. Later, a neighbor sees the open door, finds her, but she cannot be saved.
The ex-husband is a person of interest, but the cops don’t have enough to charge him.
Today, however, a convict, in return for a promise of a reduced sentence, says the ex husband offered him money to kill the ex wife. He later refused, but the key is, he says he talked with the ex- husband in the latter's apartment. Even more significant, he describes in detail the squeaky desk drawer from which the ex husband removed the proposed murder payment.
This is enough to charge the ex-husband with the actress’ murder. A jury trial begins.
The protagonist is the assistant DA, who leads the case against the ex-husband. Her DA boss is about to leave his office, since he is up for nomination to be US attorney general. The woman talks to the two cops who originally worked the case of the actress' murder. She dislikes one of them, although he is the DA's cousin.
The key is the ex husband's testimony. During the trial, when he is on the stand, the assistant trips him up. He doesn't understand how the con could have known about the squeaky desk drawer. He gets flustered and looks guilty to everyone.
The jury convicts him and his bail is of course remanded, pending sentencing.
However, a furniture mover in Brooklyn, who often hires men off the books, is urged by his wife to say he and the convict had moved another piece of furniture into the ex-husband's apartment. They dealt with the housekeeper at the time, since dead. He knows he left the con alone for awhile. Since the convict was later confirmed to be a petty thief, he could have examined the desk drawer and known how it squeaks.
In the meantime, the convict complains about his reduced, still 4 year, sentence. He says he wants probation or will provide additional testimony to mess up the assistant's case. There may be a question as to whether the one obnoxious cop had led him on as to what to testify to. But back in jail, before he can make good on his threat, he is poisoned.
Finally, the mover comes forward and shows how he and the convict had in fact been in the ex- husband's apartment. He provides journal entries to show he had hired the deceased felon. This is grounds for letting the ex husband out on bail.
The DA is furious with his assistant at this reversal of the case. He says that, somehow, she should have known about the furniture mover's activities. An acquittal for the ex husband will endanger his nomination. He orders her off the case.
In the meantime, a serial killer, wanted nationwide, has been living next to the assistant DA. He has targeted her as his next victim. Although now on the lam from New Jersey as well, he has returned with the aim of finishing her off.
But the assistant goes into NYC to look at the 15 year old case file on the murdered friend. What she finds is a stunning twist that may enable her to solve the case. In the meantime, she has to deal with threats to her life from two sources.
This latest Mary Higgins Clark provides expected suspense until all conflicts are resolved in a just manner.
Norman E. Hill, FSA, MAAA, Member AICPA, ASCPA
NoraLyn Ltd.
Books By Hills"Winner and Final Chairman"
Member: IFWTWA.Org
Member: Society of Professional Journalists
Labels: book review, Mary Higgins Clark "Please Take My Heart", Norm's Thoughts, norman e hill
posted by Norm 7:00 AM
|
 |
|
0 Comments

Book Review--"U is for Undertow," a Kinsey Millhone Novel by Sue Grafton

The "current" date for the protagonist, private investigator Kinsey, is 1988.
Kinsey is hired by a young man, who remembers he may have seen a body being buried back in 1967. It may have been the body of a 4 year old girl, who has long been missing after being kidnapped. First, there was a demand for $15,000, which was paid with marked money. Then, the demand was for $25,000. This too was dropped off, but was never picked up. The girl was never returned or found.
Kinsey investigates and, from her client's remembered locations, gets the cops to dig up a site. They find it was just a dog.
The developing plot and characters shift back and forth between 1963, 1967, and the 1988 present. In 1967, two other young men are part of the plot. The first, Jason, hates his stepmother. When his father and the woman are gone on vacation, he finds his father's gun. The second, Jason's friend, has a motorcycle and deals dope to fellow high school students and visiting hippies.
There is back and forth, between these and other characters in 1963 and 1967. In 1967, a mother is visited by her now-hippie son and his even worse hippie girlfriend. The latter fancies herself as a free spirit. She has a 10 year old (or younger) son, father unknown. They ask for money from the trust set up for the mother’s son, but are refused. Then, furious, they go away on their bus.
Kinsey, as always, is persistent and observant. Eventually, she finds the now-grown son of the hippie girl. Another complication arises when the young man who initially was her client is shot to death. But all these events, when pieced together, play a key role in her unraveling the case.
Several unexpected twists make the latest entry in the Kinsey Millhone series well worth reading.
Norman E. Hill, FSA, MAAA, Member AICPA, ASCPA
NoraLyn Ltd.
Books By Hills"Winner and Final Chairman"
Member: IFWTWA.Org
Member: Society of Professional Journalists
Labels: book review, Norm's Thoughts, norman e hill, sue grafton "U is for Undertow"
posted by Norm 7:00 AM
|
 |
|
0 Comments

Book Review - "Evidence," an Alex Delaware Novel by Jonathan Kellerman

A half built mansion is a question mark that starts the novel. The structure is owned by a fabulously wealthy sultan from a small country very close to Indonesia similar to Brunei. He is Muslim, but also adheres to older pagan customs. It seems his younger brother, while in the US, may have been killed, after killing a girl. Based on pagan custom, the brother's soul needs to have his last home lie fallow, i.e. undisturbed. The half finished mansion seems to fit this strange description.
In the mansion grounds, which have a guard, cops find the bodies of a woman and man. The man has been shot, the woman has been strangled and raped with a gun.
A mysterious woman enters the scene. She is a half sister of the girl the younger brother is alleged to have murdered. In the novel, Delaware and Sturgis find that she first tried to have the house dynamited, to punish the brother's soul. Then, later, she successfully dynamites it.
The first time, she paid $50,000 to the murdered woman and man to do her work. They took the money and skipped LA to go north. This duo, when younger, were found to have been part of an eco terrorist group. Along with two friends, they formed a vicious activist foursome.
At a storage shed tied to the murdered couple, the surveillance camera shows a man taking off with a suitcase. It is believed that the suitcase contained the money taken by the couple. Presumably, they gave up the location of the storage shed under torture.
In the meantime, the woman who allegedly destroyed the structure is arrested. Since she is not strip searched, and is wearing a wig, she removes a vial of poison from the wig and commits suicide. Her mission to punish the brother is complete. Fortunately for Detective Milo Sturgis, Delaware's co-investigator, the assisting FBI agent was responsible for the woman not being stripped searched.
In the meantime, cops find a hanger with several Indonesian planes. In one of them, under a tarmac, lies the corpse of the girl murdered by the missing brother.
This novel continues the tradition of clever and persistent psychological insight and police work expected from Kellerman/Delaware stories. Alex and his Homicide Division partner, Sturgis, tie the dots together to solve a set of sadistic murders.
Norman E. Hill, FSA, MAAA, Member AICPA, ASCPA NoraLyn Ltd. Books By Hills"Winner and Final Chairman"
Member: IFWTWA.Org
Member: Society of Professional Journalists
Labels: book review, books, Jonathan Kellerman's "Evidence", Norm's Thoughts, norman e hill
posted by Norm 7:00 AM
|
 |
|
0 Comments
