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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars STELLAR VOICE PERFORMANCE CAPTURING BOTH DANGER AND DESIRE

Both beautiful and tough, federal prosecutor Melanie Vargas grew up in Manhattan. This is her town. The neighborhood in which she spent her youth was rough, yet nothing prepared her for what she would find when she goes undercover to track a cunning murderer.

It all begins when her pager goes off at 2:00 a.m. She picks up to hear orders from...
Published on January 15, 2006 by Gail Cooke

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Que lastima! It's really a romance!
The premise sounded good--a gritty mystery based in New York with a strong female ADA. Instead, this book is a female-in-jeopardy romance with some gratuitous violence thrown in. The strong female is bullied, successfully, by her obnoxious female boss. She continues to make stupid moves and bad decisions while decrying the possibility of the same from her teenage...
Published on July 5, 2007 by Frank's Daughter


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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars STELLAR VOICE PERFORMANCE CAPTURING BOTH DANGER AND DESIRE, January 15, 2006
This review is from: The Finishing School CD (Audio CD)

Both beautiful and tough, federal prosecutor Melanie Vargas grew up in Manhattan. This is her town. The neighborhood in which she spent her youth was rough, yet nothing prepared her for what she would find when she goes undercover to track a cunning murderer.

It all begins when her pager goes off at 2:00 a.m. She picks up to hear orders from her boss, Bernadette DeFelice, chief of the Major Crimes Unit of the New York City U.S. Attorney's Office. This is a woman who gives Melanie "agita under the best of circumstances." Agita is mild for what is soon to come.

Two very wealthy girls have been found dead in the Park Avenue apartment of James Seward, a Wall Street dynamo who is running for the Senate. One of the dead is Seward's stepdaughter, the other a classmate from an exclusive school. It's the week before Christmas, and it looks like the girls have OD'd on heroin. Melanie's orders are to find the drug supplier immediately and not to mess with Seward who has many friends in high places.

Add to the mix Carmen Reyes, the building superintendent's daughter who is missing. Seward is all too eager to name her as the supplier. Melanie isn't buying all of this but she's going to have to risk her life in order to prove it.

Of course, there's romance in the handsome hunk form of FBI agent Dan O'Reilly.

Martinez peoples her story with chilling characters, especially Jay Esposito, a night club mogul who "gave off criminal charisma like musk."

Broadway and television actress Anne Twomey delivers a stellar voice performance, perfectly capturing the danger Melanie faces and the desire she feels for Dan.

- Gail Cooke
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Well-written, edgy suspense and smoldering romance, January 22, 2006
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Melanie Vargas struggles with the demands of being a single mother and a federal prosecutor. She gets a call one morning at 2 a.m. that two girls attending a swanky girl's school in Manhattan, have died from apparent drug overdoses. Melanie is relentless in her dogged pursuit of the myriad of details pertaining to this case. A third girl remains missing and Melanie does not want to give up on her. The cast of supporting characters in this novel are intriguing and deserve your full attention. FBI agent Dan O'Reilly is back on the case, and does not want to give up on Melanie. They have electrifying chemistry when they are together. A guaranteed page turner!
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars mystery and suspence, February 24, 2006
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What is unique about this book is its authenticity. Nothing is contrived and everything is well researched. A finely written mystery.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An absorbing work that surpasses the promise of MOST WANTED, February 10, 2006
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Bookreporter (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
A funny thing happened to me on the way to the bookshelf. Michele Martinez, in the short space of two novels, has become one of my favorite thriller writers, and her protagonist, federal prosecutor Melanie Vargas, one of my favorite characters. This was not entirely unexpected; Martinez's first novel, MOST WANTED, was an extremely impressive debut by any standard. She fulfills and surpasses the promise of that work with THE FINISHING SCHOOL, her sophomore effort.

I had a very minor quibble with MOST WANTED; federal prosecutors, for the most part, don't get as, uh, actively involved in their cases as Vargas seems to be. I of course understand why she does, within the context of a thriller novel. Who, after all, is going to read a book about someone who spends most of their days reading exhibits, turning pages, and trying not to upset stacks of files on their desk? In a book the federal prosecutor is going to be out hitting the street, fighting crime, kicking rear and taking names. It's the type of situation that creates the need for suspension of disbelief.

This is the reason that I fell in love with THE FINISHING SCHOOL (and in lust with Vargas). A few pages into the novel, Vargas's supervisor (the wonderfully and terminally oppressive Bernadette DeFelice) admonishes Vargas about getting "overly involved" in her investigations. Martinez's nod and wink to the foible of the genre is at once endearing and a hint of what is to come. "Overly involved" indeed. In more ways than one.

The finishing school of the title is Miss Holbrooke's School, a sprawling private institute of primary and secondary education for women. In the midst of a school fundraising drive, two teenaged students (one of them a Senator's daughter) are found dead as the result of apparent drug overdoses, and a third is missing. The investigation reveals that one of the students has been leading a tawdry double life, one that has led her into dangerous associations, including contact with New York's underground club scene. At the same time, the paths of the dead girls and their missing classmate lead back to the school and indirectly to the office of the school's headmistress, who has some secrets and an agenda of her own.

Meanwhile, Vargas's investigation brings her into contact with some colorful and dangerous characters, and also forces her to renew old acquaintances with Dan O'Reilly, last seen in MOST WANTED. The promising relationship between O'Reilly and Vargas has ended --- or has it? Apparently Vargas didn't feel that she had time for a relationship, given the responsibilities of single motherhood and her job. Martinez, by the way, pays remarkable attention to detail in every facet of THE FINISHING SCHOOL, and her accounts of Vargas's childcare difficulties --- including the wardrobe emergencies that came with them --- are a first-rate touch.

There is also a moment --- a very small moment --- near the end of the novel involving a paper clip. It is only a transitory scene, but it is absolutely perfect and ultimately essential in maintaining the illusion of reality that Martinez has created. With only two novels under her belt, she has mastered the ability to render intimate moments softly erotic without sacrificing either passion or elegance. Gentlemen, if you are puzzled by the question of what women like, and want, I would submit that the answer is contained within the pages of THE FINISHING SCHOOL.

This is an absorbing work, one that by turns will keep you reading furiously and absorbing carefully. And Vargas, exuding class as she does, is far more than a one-night literary stand. You'll want her back again and again. Highly recommended.

--- Reviewed by Joe Hartlaub
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Should really be 4. 5 stars!!, April 12, 2006
The finishing school was a wonderful read. Melanie is a very interesting and lovable character and i sincerely hope michelle martinez keeps continuing on with this new series! The finishing school has great characteriziation, lots of interesting things going on, and the mystery was a real whodonit in some aspect. I thought that i knew who the culprit was but i actually i didn't. The mystery is not as simple as one would think. Its a great read, highly recommended, although i would read Most Wanted first just to learn more about melanie!
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars AWESOME!, May 5, 2006
By 
B. Schaefer (Omaha, NE United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I could not WAIT to read this book, after listening to Most Wanted on audio cd. As I predicted, this book sucked me in and I literally couldn't put it down until I finished it. I highly recommend this book. You won't be disappointed! I hope this isn't the last we hear of Melanie Vargas and Dan O'Reilly.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A More Than Satisfying Read, February 5, 2006
By 
Heroine, Melanie Vargas, is on a case that involves two beautiful high school girls being found dead of an apparent overdose of heroin in one girl's luxurious apartment. She is duty bound to find out the truth of their deaths. This truth-finding takes her to the very heart of danger, but she hardly flinches. She is very brave and tenacious. I liked this book because it didn't have too many characters to keep track of, and the plot twists at the end made sense and were somewhat expected if you payed close attention to clues along the way. Sometimes other authors try too hard at the end for a plot twist, and it just ends up being very confusing. This leaves me anxious for another book in this series.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Please don't let The Finishing School be the finish of the Vargas series!, February 3, 2006
Once again Michele Martinez makes use of her intimate knowledge of combating drug dealers and the intricacies of prosecuting hardened criminals to tell a powerful and compelling story. This novel stars the protagonist of her first book, Federal prosecutor Melanie Vargas, and a cast of characters that includes many from that same novel but also introduces some new players.

Melanie's hard-charging and very ambitious boss has saddled her with a difficult assignment: find and prosecute the murderer of two rich young girls, students at a posh and prestigious East Side New York school. They have been found dead in the home of one of the girls' parents - who also happens to be a very influential politician who does not intend to let anything hurt his chances for election. Heroin overdosing is a messy and painful way to die, but there are other complications here as well. A young Latina girl who attends the same prestigious school - on a scholarship - is missing. Has she been kidnapped? Has she run away? Is she the supplier of the drugs?

In addition to the deaths of the young girls, a substantial amount of money is being siphoned out of the accounts of "Miss Holbrooke's School", on the order of millions of dollars. What is the tie to the drug overdose deaths of the the two girls?

Of course, complicating all this is Melanie's partner for this assignment. He happens to be Dan O'Reilly, and they are both hurting from the last time they were together, because of the angry and painful way they parted. Difficulties arise because of the intensity of their emotions, making things even harder than they already are.

If you have ever watched one of the popular TV series that show law enforcement and prosecution, and wondered what happened between scenes, this is the kind of book you'll love. It explores more than the bare bones of the story, allowing us a peek into not only the procedural aspects of the case, but how the interactions of the characters on both sides of the law affect their thoughts and actions.

Get this book and read it. You'll enjoy the suspense, as well as the satisfyingly convoluted personal interactions of the protagonist with all those around her.

-Tony Burton
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Another great Melaine Vargas story, December 18, 2007
She's finally coming around in this book to dumping her ex & hooking up with Dan O'Reilly.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Que lastima! It's really a romance!, July 5, 2007
By 
Frank's Daughter (San Antonio, TX USA) - See all my reviews
The premise sounded good--a gritty mystery based in New York with a strong female ADA. Instead, this book is a female-in-jeopardy romance with some gratuitous violence thrown in. The strong female is bullied, successfully, by her obnoxious female boss. She continues to make stupid moves and bad decisions while decrying the possibility of the same from her teenage witnesses. Oh, and every once in a while, the author reminds you that the protagonist is Latina by having her think in Spanish phrases. This is a great title for those who love romances and have a strong stomach.
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The Finishing School (Sound Library)
The Finishing School (Sound Library) by Michele Martinez (Audio CD - Feb. 2006)
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