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The Final Judgment (1998)

The Final Judgment (1998)

Book Info

Genre
Rating
3.94 of 5 Votes: 1
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ISBN
0345914627 (ISBN13: 9780345914620)
Language
English
Publisher
ballantine books

About book The Final Judgment (1998)

Pretty standard murder mystery plus court room drama with some familial angst thrown in on top. Characterizations are decent, if a little dated. The twist ending was pretty predictable, although I didn't quite know who the murderer was until the reveal. The writing is a bit clunky in some areas, but is a vast improvement over some of the more current drivel I've forced myself to read recently. This is not my typical genre, but I would probably be willing to give Patterson another shot.Caroline Masters, the main character, was pretty well fleshed out and developed despite being a lawyer rather than a detective, victim, or suspect. It was nice seeing a female in a fairly positive position rather than dead or constantly having to prove herself to male peers. Masters seemed completely confident in her abilities, without falling prey to being "too perfect." There's a healthy dose of sex sprinkled throughout the book without being vulgar, or making Masters look like an irresponsibly promiscuous sexy lawyer type. I rather liked that this was more about Masters resolving her issues with the past than completely about the trial and the end was pretty satisfying if you like nice neat packages at the end of your plot.So there's nothing really remarkable, but if you're in the need of some mediocre fare in between something especially horrible or something especially brilliant, this may be a good choice.I won this through the Forgotten Bookmarks blog, but am under no obligation to review the books from the publisher or author.

A good read, the heroine Caroline Masters is about to be appointed as a court judge when she hears that her niece is suspected of the murder of her boyfriend. She travels to where her family, including Caroline's father, live which is on the North East Coast of America. There are a couple of flashbacks - one where we find that Caroline's mother died in a car crash after having an affair with a local lothario and the other tells us that Caroline had a fling with a man who was a Vietnam draft dodger. The last we hear about this man is when he decamps via boat in the general direction of Canada after someone, we think Caroline's father, snitches on him to the local law. Meanwhile, in the present, the prosecution have found a 'witness' with some potentially damaging testimony against her niece. Caroline decides to take the case, and there are some enjoyable court room scenes in the book. I didn't spot the twist in the story, which is always a good sign for me, and the tale has a satisfactory and understandable ending. My favourite book so far by this author.

Do You like book The Final Judgment (1998)?

After reading Protect and Defend, the book in which Caroline Masters is nominated for Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, I wanted to read the book which supplies her back story and that of her daughter Brett. The plot is fast paced and compelling but, as with other Patterson books, the number of horrors one family inflicts on itself is incredible. Why Betty would tell her father about Caroline's illicit boyfriend, for example, is a little hard to swallow. Was her father supposed to be so grateful he would turn away from Caroline and toward Betty? Could Larry really be so blind to the consequences of moving back to his father-in-law's town and therefore orbit? And most of all, would Caroline really agree to defend her own daughter in a murder trial? Admittedly, she'd given said daughter up for adoption twenty-two years before, but still...Nevertheless, this was a great page turner and an irresistible summer read.
—Deb

Caroline Masters is a lawyer. Her father is a retired judge & Caroline has high hopes of becoming a judge. She is being considered for an appointment to the U.S. Court of Appeals. Just as everything she has worked so hard for & hoped for is about to happen, she receives a plea for help from a family member on the opposite coast where Caroline currently resides. There are several reasons for Caroline's decision to live as far away from her family as she could possibly get and yet she is drawn back to help them.Page after page, the reader discovers what sent Caroline packing & what drew her back.I enjoy courtroom drama, mystery and suspence. This book had all that and it held my attention long enough to make it to the end where everything becomes apparent. It was okay...better than some but not "a must read".
—Mary

from amazon.com: "Richard North Patterson frequently rejects the label "legal thriller" for his novels, and The Final Judgement works hard to transcend this limiting category. A cleverly assembled murder mystery told with rich prose ("Moonlight refracted on the still, obsidian waters of the lake and traced the pines and birches and elms surrounding it. The only sound Brett heard was the rise and fall of James's breathing.") and filled with a cast of quirky small-town New Englanders, the novel ultimately succeeds through Patterson's talents as a writer, not just as a plotter."Read another of his books, Exiled, and enjoyed. So we will see about this one.....11.26.11 - enjoyed this one just as much. Good narrative, and suspense. I didn't figure it out til the end - but, that's not saying much. Will now pick up another of his books each trip to the library.Now the sun on the front porch to begin, The Distant Hours by Kate Morton.Take note - apparently, I read an entirely different genre of books when I am not purchasing them in hardcover for myself!!
—~mad

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