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The Kills

The Kills

List Price: $25.00
Your Price: $17.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: the Kills--great story but missing character interaction
Review: I thought this was Fairstein's best story yet. The plot line was excellent and very interesting. Fairstein was very skillful in bringing together several different sub-stories that seemed unrelated at first, but all came together at the end.

The reason I gave this book only 4 instead of 5 stars was because I really missed the character interaction between Alex, Mike Chapman, and Mercer. In past books there was more interaction among them with the characters spending more personal time together, and that was always a very enjoyable extra for me in Fairstein's books. For those of us who always look forward to the unresolved sexual tension between Alex and Mike, that was missing for the most part. But then again.....maybe that's the point for now since both characters have their own personal relationships.

All in all, I definitely recommend this book as it's a great read....I just caution that the interpersonal dynamics are not as much a focus as usual, if that's one of the main reasons for reading the Alex Cooper stories.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Tsk, tsk, Harriet
Review: I was surprised to see Harriet Klauser, the doyen of Amazon book reviews, refer to "The Kills" as character Alexandra Cooper's "third" starring role in a Linda Fairstein novel. Actually, it's her sixth. You're slipping, Harriet,

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Tsk, tsk, Harriet
Review: I was surprised to see Harriet Klauser, the doyen of Amazon book reviews, refer to "The Kills" as character Alexandra Cooper's "third" starring role in a Linda Fairstein novel. Actually, it's her sixth. You're slipping, Harriet,

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Was not impressed
Review: I've read all of Linda Fairstein's other books and love Alexandra, Mike and Mercer as characters. I was excited to see this new book, but was extremely disappointed when I started reading. I found it to be too confusing with too much reference to history and very convoluted. I couldn't put down her other books and was riveted to find out what happened next. With the Kills, I just couldn't wait for it to be over.. it did nothing for me.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: smoothly mixes a legal thriller and police procedural
Review: Manhattan Sex Crimes Prosecutor Alexandra Cooper tires to persuade a jury to convict counter terrorism security consultant Andrew Tripping of raping thirty something Paige Wallis. The problem with the case is that the alleged victim has no injuries or bruises so it becomes a "He said she said" scenario in front of a judge who hates these so called rape date trials due to the typical lack of solid evidence for instance like a corpse in a homicide.

In the courtroom, Alex's case is in trouble. Meanwhile, someone murders McQueen "Queenie" Ransome, a former Harlem Renaissance dancer. Surprisingly Queenie had a fascinating past as a WW II secret agent and as the mistress of Egypt's King Farouk, whom she left one day with plenty of his treasure. NYPD detectives Mike Chapman and Mercer Wallace investigate the homicide that also brings in the CIA and links to the Tripping rape trial while someone tries to kill Alex.

THE KILLS (named for a part of lower Manhattan) excitingly and smoothly combines a legal thriller with a police procedural as Alex makes her third starring performance (see THE BONE VAULT and THE DEADHOUSE). The story line moves forward rather quickly, but it is the courtroom scenes whether in front of the jury or in the judge's chambers that raise the quality level. Though attempted murder of a government prosecutor seems hard to accept that fits in the logic of the plot especially since Alex is doing her own legwork (not sure where she finds the time - sort of like reviewing 3-4 books a day). Fans will admire the heroine and appreciate this fine thriller.

Harriet Klausner

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great read from Fairstein.
Review: Manhattan sex-crimes prosecutor Alexandra Cooper knows her new case, one involving an attack on investment banker Paige Vallis, will be hard to prove as is, but things take a sharp turn when Alex learns her client has something to hide.

What really happened the night of the attack? Why didn't Paige leave the apartment after the date turned ugly? What happened to her attackers son? And who is the mysterious man whose appearance in the courtroom scares Paige?

As Alex receives help from her detective friends on the rape case another puzzling crime is committed this time an elderly woman is found murdered and her apartment turned upside down. Who would want this woman dead and why?

While both case take strange turns more murders occur and Alex is forced to question what connection these two seemingly different women had.

'The Kills' is another great read from Linda Fairstein. The two story lines move fast combining shocking twists with courtroom thrills until a powerful climax ties together all the loose ends. Fans of Fairstein's previous novels will lap this up in one sitting for this may be her best page-turner yet.

Expect to see 'The Kills' on the top of all the bestseller lists.

Nick Gonnella

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Fabulous Fairstein
Review: Okay, I admit it, I'm already a fan. But Ms. Fairstein has even more surprises in store for Alexandra Cooper in this book and I just loved the all the history and intrigue. She taps into the imagination with a golden key -- I won't give it away. A marvelous book.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: slow start
Review: The denouement is gripping, we get a tour of parts of New York City and learn fascinating WWII history, but the story is slow-moving and characterization is flat.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Page-turning excitment,
Review: The Kills by Linda Fairstein is a page-turning suspense that held my attention during the entire book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Dead King's Gold Coin May Tell You Whodunit
Review: The Novel starts with Assistant DA Alexandra Cooper prosecuting a white supremacist, weapons freak for rape and she also finds he's been abusing and terrorizing his ten-year-old son.

Then, as the preliminary hearing gets under way, she is presented with the rape and murder of a disabled former dancer and octogenarian named Queenie. Along with her team of detective buddies, Alex is forced to commute between the courtroom and the sleazy tenement where the murder took place.

She and her cop pals find connections that lead back to events over half a century ago when Farouk was the last king of Egypt and had taken Queenie as his mistress.

Farouk was a collector of rare coins among other things and during the Second World War he was surrounded by spies from Britain and the United States, and by nationalists who wanted to send him into exile in Rome with his fortune in jewels and coins. It was the fate of one of these coins, a very rare coin, which lead to Queenie's murder in Manhattan and to a weapons freak terrorizing his small son decades later.

This is a well written mystery thriller with enough red herrings to keep you guessing as you read away. Of course, Alex, our heroine, winds up dueling for her life with the villain toward the end, this time in a struggle aboard a boat off the Kills, the muddy creeks beyond the Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor. What a climax to a super story!


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