From Publishers Weekly
Fresh from her hard-hitting rural adventure in the Edgar-nominated A Hard Bargain , lawyer Laura Di Palma has returned to San Francisco to establish a solo practice. Her first client may be fellow lawyer Margaret Lenin, whose spiritual guru, Michael Hover, videotaped group sex-therapy sessions in which Lenin participated: the tapes are showing up for rent as "adult" videos. Just as Lenin drops the case, another of Hover's lawyer-disciples asks Di Palma to represent the guru himself, who is being sued by an exotic dancer who also appears on the tapes and is romantically linked with Lenin. A frantic 2 a.m. call drags Di Palma out of bed to meet Lenin outside a sex club. Di Palma arrives to see a man break into the locked, silent building; cautiously entering, she finds him shot, along with six dead dancers. Afraid for both her life and reputation, Di Palma leaves the scene of the crimes. With the assistance of PI Sandy Arklett, she explores Hover's unorthodox business, remaining haunted by the crimes she fled. Although it attempts to address serious issues of censorship and pornography, the story is busy and unengaging, and much of its cast remains faceless. The tense finale comes feebly and too late.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
This latest Laura Di Palma adventure is no exception to the tight plotting, good characterizations, and page-turning suspense that have typified the earlier entries in the series and that make Matera one of the best contemporary mystery novelists. Having been fired from her high-powered law firm over her pro bono work--the subject of
A Hard Bargain (1992)--Laura starts her own law practice. Her first client is an old colleague who, along with several other professionals, has become involved with a New Age guru--Brother Mike--whose "spiritual guidance" includes videotaping group sex sessions and then "re-imaging" the participants to show their auras. Laura's client had no problem with all of this until the films, sans auras, began showing up in local video stores. Although the participants had signed releases allowing the taping, Laura agrees to see if they have a case--hopefully something that will get her new practice off the ground. It soon becomes clear, however, that the videos have triggered other activities, including murder. Laura calls on her old friend Sandy Arklett for help, and their ambiguous relationship, plus another distinctly odd client, makes an intriguing subplot. Highly recommended--and make sure Laura's earlier adventures are available, too. Matera is too good to miss.
Stuart Miller
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.