Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Hostile Witness by Rebecca Forster

Hostile Witness (Witness Series, #1)Hostile Witness by Rebecca Forster

My rating: 2 of 5 stars

I'm not entirely sure how to categorize this one. It's hardly a "courtroom procedural", as it's far from typical court procedure. It's a bit of a "whodunnit", but your options are limited from the beginning. But mostly it's a lot of unlikeable characters bulldogging through a trial to come to the truth.

None of the characters are very likable. Josie, the protagonist, is a whiner. She does her job, gets a client (who she believes is innocent) off a murder charge, and then throws her career away when the woman turns out really to be a murderer. Josie's love interest, Archer, handles confrontation by retreating (perhaps understandably, but it doesn't make him any more likeable); her supposed partner, Faye, doesn't want her practising the kind of law she knows Josie is good at; the girl accused of murder doesn't want to be liked; the victim was a creep; his son is a victim of child abuse who turns into a creep; and the accused's mother—and wife of the son—is the biggest creep of the lot.

I Am Not A Lawyer™, but many of the courtroom scenes don't ring true to me—and at least one reviewer who is a lawyer agreed.

There are really only three possibilities for the killer, and Forster commits the cardinal sin in a mystery writer of telling us that somebody else did it. Misleading the reader is good; lying to the reader—not so much.

Friday, December 19, 2014

Red Planet Blues by Robert J. Sawyer

Red Planet BluesRed Planet Blues by Robert J. Sawyer

My rating: 2 of 5 stars


I'm usually a big fan of Sawyer, but I just couldn't get into this one—a sort of Raymond Chandler goes to Mars. The science was almost non-existent—and I love Sawyer mostly for his science—and the characters were two-dimensional at best.

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

The Burning Room by Michael Connelly

The Burning Room (Harry Bosch, #19)The Burning Room by Michael Connelly

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


Still interesting, but it seems Connolly might be trying to write Harry Bosch out of existence, as the ending leaves him very much in the air.