When a handsome stranger walks into Joss Cole's one-woman law office on a sleepy island in Puget Sound and slaps down a hefty retainer to incorporate a fledgling electronics business, the burned-out ex-public defender has a hunch things aren't exactly as they seem. And when Dean Belden, this strange new client, comes back a few days later with a federal grand jury subpoena he swears he can't explain, she still doesn't tie it into the bizarre illness suffered by her other major clients, a group of commercial fishermen. Then Belden skips out on the feds and dies before her eyes in the fiery explosion of his float plane. Or does he? Within hours there are two attempts on Joss's life--clearly someone thinks she knows more than she's telling. Later, a nuclear fission expert shows up on the island tracking two missing tactical nuclear devices stolen from a Siberian storage facility, and the Geiger counter starts ticking. When Joss's fishermen start dying of what is clearly radioactive poisoning, the outlines of Belden's shadowy past get filled out in a tense thriller as topical as today's headlines. Steve Martini ties it all together with a fast-paced, well-plotted story of homegrown militia groups set up by America's enemies. He tosses in a hint of romance--just enough to show off Joss's vulnerable side without slowing down the action. Martini fans will swallow this one whole, while those who haven't discovered him yet can catch up with his several other thrillers on the paperback backlist, including
Compelling Evidence,
Prime Witness, and
The Judge.
--Jane Adams
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:01 -0400)
(see all 2 descriptions)
I thought Martini was beginning to stretch his courtroom characters a little too thin in The Judge; I'm glad he went off in a new direction in this book. It's as full of unexpected turns as all his previous whodunits, but this time with domestic and international terrorists. The basic plot is pretty much believable (even if there are a few too many miraculous escapes) and it'd make a great movie. Martini is to be commended for having a strong woman as protagonist; I only regret she never got her "constitutional rights". In the end, Martini kills off the wrong character; the character I had really bonded to and wanted to see in future books. (Or, did he really die? In this book, you're never sure!)
Maybe you have to suspend disbelief in a few places; and the technical stuff may be a little off beam; but it is a novel, guys, not a text book. A great trash read for a beach day, an airplane flight, or a lazy Saturday. (