29 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of my favorite suspens authors writes a great work, April 19, 2000
Once they were lovers planning to marry until Anthony Quintana turned his back on his obligation to the law, forcing Gail Connor to walk out on him. He went to Spain to forget his feeling of betrayal while she remained in Miami just as determined to overcome her feeling of deceit. She started to make a life for herself and her daughter from a previous relationship. Unbeknownst to Anthony when he left her, Gail was pregnant with his child.
A chance encounter with Anthony's eighteen-year old daughter Angela results in Gail accepting the teen's boyfriend Bobby as a client. Bobby, who has been previously convicted of some petty criminal activity, is suspected of killing Roger Cresswell, owner of Cresswell Yachts, who fired the lad for allegedly stealing. One person who Bobby insists can provide him with an alibi and prove he is not guilty is Judge Nathan Harris, a person under consideration for an appointment to the US District Court. Heeding the advice of his attorney, Nathan sends his lawyer Anthony to deal with Gail. As the two former lovers closely work together to prove Bobby's innocence, their relationship flares to life once again.
As suspense novels go, the Connor-Quintana novels rank with the best ones, but SUSPICION OF MALICE provides the audience much more than an exciting legal thriller. The tale is a relationship drama that will remind readers of the works of Delinsky and Siddons. The investigation is fascinating but the heart and soul of the tale rests in the relationship between Gail and Anthony, two obstinate but compatible individuals. Barbara Parker shows much talent in this exciting thriller has cross-genre appeal.
Harriet Klausner
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Literate and lively, June 6, 2000
Barbara Parker cleverly entwines the emotional tension between her two series characters, Miami lawyer Gail Connor and her former fiancé, Cuban criminal attorney Anthony Quintana, with a whodunit puzzle among the vicious rich.
Found murdered in his cousin's backyard after a wild party, Roger Cresswell, heir to a yacht-building fortune, turns out to have been spectacularly unpopular. His bimbo wife was sleeping with the aforementioned cousin, his ill father furiously regretted turning over the reins of his company, his uncle feared discovery of his embezzlements, the uncle's clever wife and her lover, the yacht-yard supervisor, feared that Roger was going to run the venerable company into the ground.
But with all these great suspects to choose from, the police focus on a young Puerto Rican ballet dancer from the New York slums. Though Connor is no criminal lawyer, Quintana's daughter Angela begs her to take on the dancer, her secret boyfriend. Connor tracks down the dancer's reluctant alibi witness (a judicial candidate) and discovers Quintana is his lawyer.
The tension of their recent, explosive break-up is exacerbated by Connor's pregnancy. She has not told Quintana and is considering abortion. And the dancer is seeing Angela against her father's express wishes. But Connor and Quintana manage to team up to clear Connor's client and keep Quintana's out of it - by presenting the police with a new suspect. All this sounds convoluted, even contrived when I say it, but Parker makes it sound quite reasonable.
The detective and legal work is clever and though the rich family is typically corrupt and dysfunctional, the sparks between the two likable protagonists keep things lively. Parker's literate writing style and thoughtful characterizations is highly satisfying.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This one's much improved!, May 19, 2000
I have really enjoyed the Gail Connor/Anthony Quintana series; however, I was disappointed in the last one. But Parker has really redeemed herself. The characters sizzle along, the plot is unusual and interesting, and the resurrection of the love story which appeared doomed (stay tuned) was done quite well... I was happy that Gail seems to be acting more responsibly and ethically and thus more believable - she is flawed, but not stupid... One suggestion - the relationships of the various characters took awhile to iron out, and other than the "surprise" one - perhaps it would have been helpful to include a family "tree" in the opening pages - it would have helped to focus on the story as it got going.....
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