Pages

Saturday

"Absolute Rage" by Robert K. Tanebaum

This is the first book by Tanenbaum that I've read. For a story about a lawyer, written by a trial lawyer, I must admit that I was a little dubious. To my surprise I found it very exciting read, with action and suspense around every corner. After performing a little research I learned that this book, written in '02, was just one of many in his Butch Karp and Marlene Ciampi series. I'm definitely going to get some more. I give it 4-1/2 Stars.



DESCRIPTION: While New York City sizzles beneath a blanket of early summer humidity, the Karp family is happily taking refuge in their renovated farmhouse on Long Island's north shore. Karp's battles against the City's corrupt politicians are never-ending. His wife, Marlene, is training guard dogs on their picturesque acreage; Lucy is enjoying her summer break from Boston College and playing the part of the dutiful daughter, assisting with the running of the business and tending to her rambunctious twin brothers." The tide quickly changes, however, when Marlene befriends her beachside neighbor, Rose Wickham-Heeney, a northeastern aristocrat turned wife of West Virginia coal mine union leader Ralph "Red" Heeney. Soon after the fun-filled weeks of family barbecues and lazy afternoons with the Heeneys, the Karps discover that Rose, Red, and their daughter Lizzie, have been brutally murdered back home in McCullensburg. Irresistible force meets immovable object when the West Virginia governor appoints Karp as special prosecutor to bring justice to the corrupt town, its union chieftan, and his band of merry thugs. Marlene joins Karp as he searches for the killers and works to save his own family from an evil that runs as deep as the mines that fuel it.

No comments: