Alex Cross's Trial Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

Alex Cross's Trial Book

Heart-felt and emotional, Alex Cross's Trial is like no story James Patterson has told before. Detective Alex Cross has grown up hearing about his great uncle Abraham who struggled for survival in the time of the Ku Klux Klan, it's a story that has been passed down from generation to generation and one he will tell to his children.In 1906, America is segregated and discrimination and violence is rife on the streets. But one man, Ben Corbett, a courageous lawyer from Washington DC, rises up against injustice and represents the people who no one defend because of their colour. When local lynching starts and rumours about a Ku Klux Klan revival in his hometown begin to spread, Ben is asked by President Roosevelt to investigate. When Ben heads back to his home town of Eudora, Mississippi, he looks up Abraham Cross, a man willing to help him to find the information he needs in the deepest darkest south. Ben soon sees that beneath the surface of this town is a bubbling racial hatred and once the local white people realise what he's up to, tension builds and he is placed in grave danger. Ben must decide whether he's willing to put his family and friends in danger. Should he walk away now or continue to fight for justice and take on the most dangerous trial of his life? Read More

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    Over the years, James Patterson has consolidated a reputation as one of the most copper-bottomed treasures in the crime genre with his Alex Cross books, and he has perfected a canny (but highly persuasive) economy in his narratives: his clipped, highly charged, pithy chapters possess not an ounce of subcutaneous fat (and frequently move towards some kind of unresolved climax, guaranteeing that we have to turn to the next chapter). Alex Cross’s Trial, the latest outing, is something very different for his quadriplegic investigator, but Patterson (as ever) displays the page-turning skills that are his trademark (assuming, of course, that the bulk of the book is his work – this is another of his many portmanteau efforts; from his army of co-authors, he here utilises Richard Dilallo).

    The innovations in Alex Cross’s Trial involve nothing less than Alex himself narrating the story of young Washington lawyer Ben Corbett who lived at the turn of the Nineteenth Century.

    Ben is highly adept at his job, but is still regarded by his wife and father as something of a failure, wasting his time (as they see it) by doing unremunerative work for the poor and oppressed. Then, to his amazement, Ben receives a summons to the White House – President Roosevelt, no less, has selected him personally to help look into lynchings performed by a newly emergent Ku Klux Klan.

    As an insight into Alex Cross’ background, this is both illuminating and provocative, but James Patterson (and his collaborator) prove quite as adroit at a historical narrative as at a contemporary one. --Barry Forshaw

  • 0316070629
  • 9780316070621
  • James Patterson, Richard DiLallo
  • 24 August 2009
  • Little Brown and Company
  • Hardcover (Book)
  • 380
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