A New York Times Bestselling Author
Former Manhattan prosecutor Linda Fairstein delivers a chilling new Alexandra Cooper thriller, in which Alex matches wits with the master of detective fiction himself - Edgar Allan Poe.
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Former Manhattan prosecutor Linda Fairstein delivers a chilling new Alexandra Cooper thriller, in which Alex matches wits with the master of detective fiction himself - Edgar Allan Poe.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
27 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fairstein's Best Ever,
By Wilkie Collins (USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Entombed (Alexandra Cooper) (Hardcover)
I confess I'm a great fan of the Alex Cooper series because Fairstein, a former prosecutor, combines her vast knowledge of the criminal justice system with appealing characters, great plots, and a breezy, fast-paced style. In this book she outdoes herself. She reveals a hidden story about Edgar Allen Poe and gives us a glimpse into one of the great New York landmarks -- also a Fairstein specialty. It's fun, informative and truly frightening, worthy of the master to whom it pays homage. Be prepared to stay up all night.
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Much Better!,
By Wendy Kaplan (Houston) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Entombed (Alexandra Cooper) (Hardcover)
Unlike the last few in Fairstein's Alexandra Cooper series, this one really held my interest, as the plot is wound around the tales of Edgar Allen Poe.When a decades-old skeleton is found entombed behind a brick wall in a home where Poe once lived, and it is ascertained that the corpse was buried alive, Poe's tales become all too real. Alex, Mercer and Chapman are quickly caught up in this very cold case that becomes hotter by the second as they uncover a mysterious Poe society, all of whose members could have been invented by the master himself. Entwined with that interesting mystery is another case Alex has on her plate: the return of the so-called "Silk-Stocking Rapist," who terrorized women on the East Side of New York, and then mysteriously disappeared without ever having been caught. Now, it seems, he is back, and Alex, head of the DA's Sex Crimes Unit, is desperate to catch him. I truly enjoyed this book and am glad that Fairstein seems back on track like she was in her early works. Recommended.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
POE IS THE ANSWER...WHAT WAS THE QUESTION???,
By
This review is from: Entombed: A Novel (Alexandra Cooper Mysteries) (Paperback)
Fairstein's epistle gives the reader a lot of information to chew on and digest. First, we have the return of a rapist who has been strangely silent for the past four years, as well as a series of seemingly unconnected murders. When workmen demolishing a 19th century brownstone that was once the home of Edgar Allan Poe discover the body of a woman buried upright behind a brick wall it appears that "life is imitating art" and someone has taken a page out of a Poe novel.Utilizing the search for the dual criminals as the "background" for the story, Fairstein takes us on a tour of the Bronx. She gives us an up close and personal look at the Botanical Gardens which contains 50 acres of forest, the waterfalls of the Bronx River Gorge, a "crystal palace" conservatory containing 17,000 glass panes, and the first Hall of Fame in America (an outdoor vista containing 98 bronze busts of Great Americans ranging from poets, to jurists, to soldiers). And I thought Central Park was the only touch of green in NYC. The garden, she tells us, was once owned by P. Lorillard, tobacco scion, and contains an old snuff mill as well as Poe cottage, where Poe lived with his wife/cousin until her death. (And now you have the "connector" between the Bronx Botanical Tour and the murderer who feels a kinship with Poe and commits his crimes according to macabre Poe plots). Fairstein fleshes out her rather thin plot with loads of in depth facts and observations about everything from Fordham University to the Gould Library. All of the "facts" that liberally pepper the book could serve as the basis for a plethora of Jeopardy final questions (a game that her alter ego, Alex Cooper, and friends Mike and Mercer are rather fond of playing). Emtombed is more a guided tour of the Bronx and a look at Poe's sad existance than the murder mystery with gothic overtones I'm sure it was meant to be.
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