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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Ben Kincaid does it again!,
By Chuck Hildbold (Vandergrift, Pa United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Death Row (Hardcover)
Reading William Bernhardt is always a treat. Seeing the mix of characters in the office and Ben Kincaid's sometime low self-esteem make for a believable and engaging lawyer and his firm. (Didn't actually know they existed!) There is the usual tension between Ben and Christina. There is the goofiness of Loving that adds humor in just the right spots and, of course, there are the last minute heriocs that always come with a twist. This is a good book and I am already looking forward to seeing Ben in action again. Mr. Bernhardt: You don't write quickly enough!!!
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A LEGAL PULSE POUNDER,
This review is from: Death Row (Hardcover)
As a former trial lawyer William Bernhardt bases his legal thrillers on hard earned data and experience, realities which make his tales all the more exciting. Suspense, masterful plotting, and an au courante subject are elements readers have come to expect from this popular author, and all are found in abundance in his latest novel.Death Row, another in the Ben Kincaid series, tackles criminal appeals and the death penalty. Tulsa is shocked and saddened when a family is ruthlessly murdered in their comfortable suburban home. There is only one survivor to tell the story and identify the attacker - teen-aged Erin Faulkner. As is his wont, attorney Kincaid champions an unpopular cause in his defense of Ray Goldman, a chemist who is accused of the heinous crime. Screaming media headlines and blood curdling details seem to seal the chemist's fate. But, the always perspicacious Kincaid mounts his defense on the dearth of damning evidence and police goof-ups during the investigation. It seems that Goldman will go free until young Erin testifies and points her finger at him. True to his white knuckle writing reputation Bernhardt propels readers to moments before Goldman's walk to the death chamber when a sudden reprieve is announced. It seems that Erin has recanted her testimony to Kincaid, and wants desperately to save an innocent man. Shockingly, Erin cannot even save herself as she is soon found dead; it is believed by her own hand. The cause of her death may be accepted by most, but certainly not by Kincaid. He speculates that the same merciless killer who murdered her family also took Erin's life. But, how can he prove it, how can he find the mysterious killer, and can he do it without losing his own life? Jet propelled action and a topic from today's newspapers combine in this estimable legal pulse pounder. - Gail Cooke
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Another Defense Attorney Writes Against The Death Penalty,
By
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This review is from: Death Row (Mass Market Paperback)
Ray Goldman, was a chemist who worked on food flavoring. One of his collegues was brutally murdered along with his family. There was one survivor. A fifteen year old daughter. Police suspected and subsequently arrested Goldman for the crime. He was convicted on testimony of the daughter who stated that though she could not visually identify Goldman she was sure that it had been his voice. Seven years later with Goldman's appeals exhausted she recanted her testimony to Goldman's attorney Ben Kincaid. The next day the real murderer killed her making it look like a suicide. Her best friend shortly thereafter met the same fate. Kincaid pulled out all stops trying to solve the case. This book had several rather odd hobbies associated with characters. A female shrink who collected butterfly specimens and a would be boyfriend of the deceased daughters friend who collected and sold spider venom. There were side romantic involvements between two police detectives as well as between Kincaid and his associate Christina McCall. Another to be redeemed character was a young sex offender who ultimately did not want to be the monster he had become. The tone of this book reminded me of James Sheehan's The Mayor Of Lexington Avenue. The author writes well and the plot moves along fairly well though to my taste it tended to start bogging down in a few places.
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