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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars She did again and this time its even better
Oh my God, Mary Jane Clark did it again, and this time its better than before. Her latest novel "Let Me Whisper In Your Ear" is true to its media thriller genre. Mary Jane Clark had me hooked from the first page to the last. She is so good with the whodunit's that she had me guessing all the way to end, and even then I was shocked to find out who it was...
Published on August 11, 2000 by frenchy78

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars A loud "Whisper"
They say to write about what you know, and CBS writer/producer Mary Jane Clark does just that. In her third mystery novel, "Let Me Whisper In Your Ear," she tackles the cutthroat biz of TV news. Unfortunately, the mystery is a lot less interesting than it sounds.

Laura is a rising star at Key News, with her uncanny ability to create "obits" of people...

Published on April 24, 2004 by E. A Solinas


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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars She did again and this time its even better, August 11, 2000
Oh my God, Mary Jane Clark did it again, and this time its better than before. Her latest novel "Let Me Whisper In Your Ear" is true to its media thriller genre. Mary Jane Clark had me hooked from the first page to the last. She is so good with the whodunit's that she had me guessing all the way to end, and even then I was shocked to find out who it was. Her writing is so clear and easy to read, you get hooked on the characters and you get to know what goes on behind the scenes of the television world. She has got the media world down packed. You have got to get this book its too good not to. Also read her two prior books, "Do You Want To Know A Secret" and "Do You Promise Not to Tell," for more info on them check out her website www.MaryJaneClark.com, that's how I found out about them or just read what the other amazon customers have written about them. I really think she is definitely the Next Big Thing...
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The best Mary Jane Clark book yet., October 19, 2000
By 
Moe811 (New York USA) - See all my reviews
The Clark family has a real feel for the suspense novel. This member has set her mysteries around a television network's news division in NYC. Her main character is an up and coming producer of a 60 Minutes-like news program. She is working on a story of the diappearance of a young boy from the old Palisades Amusement Park, not knowing that both she and her superiors at work have ties to the incident. The plot twists and turns are engrossing and I had a hard time putting this one down.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Page-Turner, June 22, 2004
By A Customer
I saw this book in a bookstore and bought it after reading the synopsis. It was a good buy and I read it in one day. The book is written sometimes from many different people's viewpoints,but it isn't confusing like some books are when they are written like that. It focuses on the death of a little boy that happened thirtysomething years ago and the more recent death of a reporter who jumped off the roof of the building she lived in. It's ruled a suicide, but Laura Walsh wonders whether it really is or not. Now she begins the journey of going through the reporter's past. But will the past also include of shocking revelations that she wished she never had found out? Will she finally find out what her mother's haunting words meant that she told her father so many years ago? She also soon finds out that somehow the suicide case and the case of the boy who died thirtysomething years ago are tied in someway. How she doesn't know. But she intends to find out what happened that night to the little boy and how he died and why. All the questions and many more are answered in the end. Get this book and find out what the answers are! Good book for summer reading on a vacation.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Better and Better, August 4, 2001
By A Customer
As someone old enough to have actually visited Palisades Amusement Park, Mary Jane Clark's latest thriller was a wonderful trip down Memory Lane. Even more fascinating is Clark's masterful tale of murder past and present. For those of us who have marveled when TV News anchors can present a whole videography of a famous person's life just minutes after they die, replete with music and voice-over, Clark gives a behind-the-scenes view of "obit" writers and, in Laura Walsh, Whisper's attractive heroine, we get an inkling of what producing such video obituaries can do to someone's self-identity and reputation. Clark also paints a vivid picture of an evening "news magazine" show like "60 Minutes" and all the egos that are at stake with every segment that airs. This is a full-tilt-boogie psychological thriller and, with Let Me Whisper in Your Ear, Mary Jane Clark is getting better and better!
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars A loud "Whisper", April 24, 2004
They say to write about what you know, and CBS writer/producer Mary Jane Clark does just that. In her third mystery novel, "Let Me Whisper In Your Ear," she tackles the cutthroat biz of TV news. Unfortunately, the mystery is a lot less interesting than it sounds.

Laura is a rising star at Key News, with her uncanny ability to create "obits" of people who are either going to die or have just died. Then there is a discovery made -- a young boy who disappeared at an amusement park thirty years before is found, dead, with all his bones broken. And at a party, star journalist Gwyneth Gilpatric is thrown from her rooftop.

Who wanted her dead? A better question would be: who DIDN'T want her dead? Her plastic surgeon, her jilted lover, her lover's angry wife, the coworker whose job she destroyed, even her cleaning lady -- for envy, revenge, and salvaging their careers. Even Laura is under suspicion, having inherited most of Gwyneth's money and possessions. As she begins to unravel both unsolved mysteries, she finds that the murderers may be too close to her...

"Let Me Whisper In Your Ear" falls under the shadow of Mary Higgins Clark. It has pretty much the same sort of elements -- glitzy glamour, a high-powered young professional woman as amateur detective, plenty of motives and suspects. It even has the same short chapters. But Clark can't bring quite the level of suspense and vibrancy to her mystery. "Whisper" just doesn't gel.

Clark tries too hard to evoke a feeling of suspense, throwing out red herrings and clues by the dozen (although one of the deaths is ridiculously easy to solve). Her writing isn't that good; she spends more time describing designer clothes, furs and shoes than she does describing the characters. However, there are some scenes where she blossoms -- the scene where Gwyneth falls to her death is chilling.

Clark's characters tend to be "types" rather than people. Even with Laura's tragic history, she's a pretty boring heroine. The nasty, ambitious Gwyneth is far more compelling. The rest of them -- traumatized guy, catty alcoholic wife of sexy adulterer, cheating lovers, sexy kept girl -- are pretty cliched, and Clark adds nothing to them.

"Let Me Whisper In Your Ear" strains too much to be considered more than a very light mystery read. But Mary Jane Clark has some promise, even if it only pops up now and then. Flat and unengaging.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great read!, September 13, 2000
By A Customer
I read this book in four hours and loved it. Mary Jane Clark keeps you guessing as to who the killer is and it is always the one you least suspect.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A Good Beach Read, August 21, 2001
This is a good book for a day at the beach. Laura Walsh, an up and coming producer for a major magazine, is working on an article regarding the now defunct Palisades Amusement Park. When digging commences for the new high-rise building that will take its place, the skeleton of a boy who disappeared 30 years ago is discovered. As Laura continues to try and get information on the Park, she begins to suspect that her father (who ran one of the rides at the park) may have been involved. There are a few surprise twists and turns throughout the story which make this a nice, light suspenseful read which will most likely hold your attention.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Let Me Whisper in your Ear, January 6, 2007
Always good reading with Mary Jane Clark. Twists and turns that keep me on the edge of my chair.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars She keeps getting better, December 23, 2003
By 
Mitzi Ditsy "ditsymitzi" (Bristol, CT United States) - See all my reviews
This was my third Mary Jane book and I absolutely loved it. I read it so fast because it was so interesting with different plots going and because her chapters are short. I am one of those people that enjoy books that have short chapters. This book also appealed to me because Mary Jane writes about people in distress, like Laura's father who is a hopeless alcoholic and her new boyfriend who has a drug habit. Nice to know that there are authors out there that keep in touch with the real world and know how to work it into a plot line without demoralizing people because they have human weaknesses. I can't wait to read her other books.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Clark settles in to fine third outing -- but still clutter, June 1, 2002
By 
Gerald M. Bull "Jerry Bull" (Fairview, TN United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
We've been reading Mary Jane Clark's newsroom-set mysteries in order, and it appears the "formula" is now firmly set. Again, we have the interesting venue of "Key News", where Clark capitalizes on her real life job at CBS News to give us an inside look at the stresses and glamour of television news producing. In particular, Whisper gives us an inside look at "Key's" competition to "60 Minutes" called Hourglass, where the principals will do almost anything in the chase for ratings superiority. We also get the scoop on how TV stations turn out those beautifully crafted video obituaries only hours after the death of a famous person.

That latter technique comes into play when the star of Hourglass, Gwyneth Gilpatric, allegedly falls to her death from the roof of her penthouse at her annual New Year's Eve Party. Our ambitious leading lady, Laura Walsh, proceeds from airing an obit prepared in advance to gaining a job on staff at Hourglass, having interned there as a college student. Her first assignment, to produce a retrospective of New Jersey's famous Palisades (Amusement) Park, quickly stirs up intrigue in the form of a 30-year old suspicious death of a young boy there, and the roles of Gilpatric, Laura's father (who used to run the Cyclone at the park), and another boy that survived his friend's death. Another murder or two complete a very intricate plot and reveal a fairly surprising conclusion that wraps up just about everything by page 320. So most will find this a good story, entertaining, informing, and suspenseful enough to keep those pages turning quickly.

The part of the formula we don't like are 145 chapters in a book this small, which chop you from scene to scene in just seconds of reading; and Clark's seeming insistence to fill these stories with hundreds of details, characters, and setting changes -- what we call clutter. Axe half the chapter switches and half that unnecessary stuff, and we'd be headed closer to the top shelf of the library instead of the beach book bin. Just our opinion -- otherwise, we're happy!
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Let Me Whisper in Your Ear
Let Me Whisper in Your Ear by Mary Jane Clark (Hardcover - Dec. 2000)
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