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Book Review: A Certain Justice

Reviewed By: Carl Brookins - RAM


A Certain Justice    
John T. Lescroart
Class/Genre:   Mystery
Series: Dismas Hardy and/or Abe Glitsky
Island (Dell) 527 pg. 1995

Review by Carl Brookins

San Francisco, the most tolerant city in the universe, right? Well, don't forget it killed Harvey Milk. And now it's after Kevin Shea, an innocent white ordinary male who was at the wrong place at the wrong time. In fact, if Shea had walked away from the incident that starts riots, lootings and burnings in the city by the bay, he'd have been home free. Instead, he tries to be a good Samaritan. Everything after that is down a very steep hill for Kevin Shea.

In A CERTAIN JUSTICE, Lescroart brings together a divorced, honest cop with serious child care problems, an ambitious black city prosecutor and her mother, police administrators of several races, and other demagogues from the right and the left, so he has to keep track of multiple threads. And he does, in a masterful clean way which allows the reader to move with him cleanly through the story. Besides these sometimes murky relationships, the central very suspenseful story of the attempts to find Kevin Shea before something bad happens.

Anyone who reads A CERTAIN JUSTICE will find he or she must reexamine many previously held and automatic presumptions. This is a novel that deserves the cliché, a real page-turner.

Carl Brookins - RAM

Reprinted with permission. Do Not repost without permission from the author, Carl Brookins - RAM

Please visit Carl's website at http://www.carlbrookins.com/


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