Life Penalty

by Joy Fielding

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She's searching for the man who killed her daughter. But will he find her first? In a novel that grips like a waking nightmare, master storyteller Joy Fielding creates a searing examination of a horrifying crime, the limits of the law, and a woman's terrifying journey into a killer's twisted mind. In one tragic afternoon everything changed. Until then, Gail Walton had considered herself lucky. With a successful husband, two daughters, and a house in the New Jersey suburbs, Gail lived a safe show more and predictable life. Then the unthinkable happened: her six-year-old daughter Cindy was abducted, sexually assaulted, and murdered. Consumed by grief and rage, Gail has retreated into herself. Her family and friends fear she's losing her grip on reality. The police warn her to let them handle the investigation. But not one of them knows the truth: that Gail has a description of the killer, a plan to set herself up as a decoy, and a room in a run-down boardinghouse. And Gail Walton has just bought herself a gun.... show less

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2 reviews
Gail, her husband Jack, Jennifer her oldest, and Cindy the youngest, were one happy family. Having plenty of wealth, a beautiful home, and all that goes with a richer lifestyle, you wouldn't want for anything more. But perfect doesn't last forever when six-year-old Cindy is raped and murdered. Her killer leaves her under a bush afterwords like a piece of trash. When Gail comes home after an afternoon with her friend to find police there waiting on her, she is very fearful. Of course the minute she learns the news, she is in denial big time, a state of shock, and takes forever to even be able to talk at all. As life continues on, Gail has her mind on one thing only-and that is finding Cindy's killer no matter what. She does very show more dangerous things; hitchhikes on the streets, and goes to very dangerous parts of town to find the killer. The police just won't work fast enough for her."Life Penalty" was a fairly easy read, although a little far-fetched. Jack was too patient, Jennifer too perfect, and Gail just plain too obsessed. I was pleased to see that the police knew what she was doing and that they weren't portrayed as incompetent, but didn't Jack ever phone home during the day and wonder where his wife was? Didn't Jennifer mention coming home to an empty house to him? I also thought the ending was terrible - I understand why she did what she did and even that it wasn't important to the reader to know what the results of her actions would be, but I thought it unreasonable to expect that the reader would accept the fact that other characters reacted the way they did. I enjoyed the book to the extent that I would read future books by this author, but not enough to give it a ringing endorsment. show less
What lengths would you go to find your 6 yr. old daughter's killer?
What would you do when you met her killer face to face?
A stay-at-home mother learns that her daughter had been raped and killed while she was visiting and shoppping with a friend. That was a guilt trip in itself. She nearly goes crazy, goes into a deep depression & tries to find the killer herself when she thinks that the police isn't trying hard enough to find him. She almost loses her best friend, her husband and her other daughter. She goes into the sleazy parts of New Jersey, goes into parks at night but to no avail.
All of Fielding's books that I've read are rather slow in the beginning, but they get very suspenseful towards the end.

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Author and actress Joy Fielding was born in Canada in 1945. She received a BA in English literature from the University of Toronto in 1966. While a student, she focused on acting and was one of four stars in a student movie, Winter Kept Us Warm. After graduation, she moved to Los Angeles and appeared on Gunsmoke. Her first book, The Best of show more Friends, was published without an agent. She has written numerous novels since then including Don't Cry Now, The Deep End, The Other Woman, Missing Pieces and Now You See Her. The Periodical Distributors of Canada named her book, Kiss Mommy Goodbye, Book of the Year for 1982. She has contributed book reviews to the Toronto Globe and Mail, CBC's The Radio Show, and CBC-TV's The Journal's Friday Night. Her books, See Jane Run and Tell Me No Secrets, have been adapted into films. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Life Penalty
Original title
Life penalty
Original publication date
1984
People/Characters
Gail Watson ; Jack Walton; Cindy Walton; Mark Gallagher; Jennifer Walton; Eddie Fraser (show all 11); Dave Harrington; Lila Harrington; Richard Cole; Dean Majors; Laura
Dedication
In memory of my wonderful father, Leo Tepperman
First words
The nightmare began at exactly seventeen minutes after four on the last afternoon of an especially warm sunny day in April.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)The sound of applause.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Mystery, Suspense & Thriller
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PR9199.3 .F518 .L5Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish LiteratureEnglish literature: Provincial, local, etc.
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Statistics

Members
298
Popularity
107,409
Reviews
2
Rating
½ (3.34)
Languages
8 — Czech, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Spanish, Swedish
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
34
ASINs
3