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Simple Truth / Abridged

Simple Truth / Abridged

List Price: $24.98
Your Price: $24.98
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Do yourself a favor and skip it.
Review: A Supreme Court clerk learns about a conspiracy through an appeal filed by a lifer and is murdered to cover it up. His brother and girlfriend are soon on the case to track the killers. Baldacci's writing is frequently plodding, the characters are thoroughly stereotyped, and the plot is both predictable and ridiculous.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Just a good mystery
Review: Mystery books tend to be by-the-numbers. There's the conspiracy that one character knows and gets killed over. There's the conspirator on the phone whose identity isn't revealed until the last 30 pages. There's the red herring and there's the plot twists occuring at regular intervals.

Naturally they rise and fall on the characters. If you like the characters you stay with it. If you don't, you throw it in the pile. Sara Evans and John Fiske are two fairly fleshed out characters. They are likeable. Now, Sara is a bit bland in places and you don't really believe the romance angle, but they have a workable chemistry. Rufus Harms is a little too innocent, but that's ok.

What works and doesn't work at the same time is the relationship between John and his brother Mike. It's a little too fleshed out. It threatens to become the focus of the book. You suspect that the author wanted to write an Ann Tyler book about how families can spend years angry at each other before working out their petty differences. It makes for compelling characterization but it also makes for distraction.

(spoiler)There are a couple of surprises but anyone whose ever read mysteries knows to focus on the character that seems to have nothing to do with the narrative except for just being a nice guy related to another character. But overall it's a fun fast read.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Simply disappointing
Review: After reading my first Baldacci book and being pleased with the pacing, the characters, and the unexpected plot twists, I anxiously awaited the arrival of "The Simple Truth" to add to my summer fun reading. Whatever adeptness I saw in the Baldacci's earlier attempt was absent from this bit of story-telling. First, he kills off a fresh faced, promising character early in the story. I realize the attempt was to shock the reader and have the flawed older brother come in for a proper since of vengeance and self-vindication. As far as I was concerned, it didn't work. Also, I had guessed the big secret that the title refers to as the "simple truth" well before the book was half finished, but Baldacci leads up to the revelation likes its going to make you drop the book in disbelief. Come on -- John Rebus, Harry Bosch, Elvis Cole, Miss Marple, or the Hardy Boys would have figured this one out so soon they wouldn't have even written a book about it!

Even if you lower your standards for summer fare, I wouldn't think this book would be worth the effort.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: NOT A LEGAL THRILLER
Review: When I first got the book I thought it would be like John Grisham's books. It wasn't even close to it. The first half of the book was so boring. Only like the second half does the book get exciting. I wouldn't even call it exciting. This should be like a mystery book instead of a courtroom thriller. It didn't have like a big courtroom drama or anything like that. If you want a good courtroom thriller, look into John Grisham books.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Worst book ever
Review: I'm annoyed that I have to give this book one star. It is perhaps the worst piece of fiction I have ever read. I'm just as willing as the next person to suspend disbelief when reading for entertainment's sake. However, this book goes way beyond that. As a licensed attorney, it's embarassing that Baldacci was once one as well and churns out an incredibly inaccurate, sensationalized, unrealistic depiction of the law and the Supreme Court in particular.

Even aside from that, his writing is terrible. The characters have no depth, parts of the story are simply not believable, and the overall plot is tired and predictable. Baldacci utilizes so many of the cliches of the suspense genre, both cinematic and literary, that I found myself laughing at every flip of the page. I finished the book only out of morbid curiosity to see what he would try to pull next. Without giving anything away, all I can say is that 95 percent of the events and dialogue in the book would never happen, except maybe on Mars.

Those unfamiliar with the law may find this book enjoyable. I urge you not to take it too literally, though.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Audio Book Better than Book
Review: Reading prior reviews, apparently the audio book is much better than the book. The audio book omitted any reference to a sexual relationship between John & Sarah and didn't give an involved picture of Supereme Court operations, unlike the book. The book was a good fit as an andio book...very suspenseful and a lot of action. The ending explanation of "whodunit" was a little unbelieveable and rather convoluted, but that also made the ending a surprise.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Definitely a hit
Review: This was the first of Mr. Baldacci's books that I had read and I really enjoyed it. The plot twists and turns are truly excellent and I was kept up late at night because I just couldn't find a good place to put it down! If you're going to be busy, don't pick up this book but if you've got a snowy day inside or just a bit of spare time, definitely consider this book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent
Review: I believe that this book is one of Baladacci's best ever. Whoever likes legal thriller, should not miss this book!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A Good Book - After the First 200 Pages
Review: I'm glad that I endured the boring parts - i.e. the first 200 pages - of this slow starter, because it does start to get interesting on about page 205. Then I started getting into it. The plot is actually very well crafted with an exciting ending, but in the first 200 pages of a 500-and-something page book there needs to be more than just introducing the characters and their particular neuroses. The protaganist, legal eagle and boy-wonder Michael Fiske, is such a goody-two-shoes that I was practically HAPPY when he's bumped off by the bad guys early on (not a spoiler - it's on the book's back cover.)

Anyway, I found Baldacci's dialogue throughout the book between the characters fairly wooden and contrived - I had just finished reading John Sandford's "Easy Prey" and going from that book to this one was kind of like eating a steak at Morton's of Chicago and then eating a steak at the Red Robin - filling, nutritious, and yet: a disappointment. If I could have given this 2 and a half stars I would have.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: No flaws in this one
Review: The story is about a black military con who is seeking justice after serving 25 years in prison for a murder he did not commit. After receiving a letter he discovers that he is innocent and files and appeal with the US Supreme Court because he is well aware that he was a victim of a conspiracy of a group that will do the impossible to cover it up, this appeal is found by a clerk who gets so astounded that begins an investigation on his own bending the standard procedures of the US Supreme Court and so putting his brilliant life and career at risk

Regardless of the mystery (who is behind the cover up and why), the best feature of the plot, is the trickery subtly outlined behind the scenes, how Mr Baldacci deceives the reader in terms of characters' behavior and attitudes throughout the whole book from beginning to end and how he also flawlessly solve the puzzle without to rely on the last of the minute non sense sudden turn of the events, a subterfuge very usually employed by many well known mystery writers. For this reason this book stands out from the pack.


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