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Arraignment
 
 

Arraignment (Mass Market Paperback)

de Steve Martini (Author) "Nick's office is on seven, the bottom floor of Rocker, Dusha and DeWine, better known to the legal set as RDD ..." En savoir plus
2.9étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (34 évaluations de client)

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From Amazon.com

When Paul Madriani's old friend, flamboyant criminal-defense lawyer Nick Rush, is gunned down on the streets of San Diego along with a client, Madriani sets out to find the killer. He follows the trail through shady real-estate dealings, cross-border smuggling, political corruption, and a nasty fight between Rush's ex and his young trophy wife over a hefty life-insurance policy. Eventually the case leads Madriani to the Yucatan Peninsula near Cancún, where the last third of the book takes place--a dandy locale for skullduggery, even if it does make you suspect that the author thought up the plot while vacationing there.

The Arraignment is marred by some sloppy, foggy-headed writing ("The neighborhood exudes the kind of aura picked up by a sixth sense that lingers and lifts the hair on the back of my neck"), and the plot, after its initial bang, sags for a while before it gets moving again. However, the sheer vigor of Martini's prose, his densely inventive plotting, and his sharply drawn characters carry you happily, tensely along. The book's action scenes--including a hand-to-hand fight in a shabby apartment and an unforgettable poolside shooting at a Cancún resort--are told in fresh, vivid prose that unfolds with hypnotic clarity. And the denouement is great fun, although the complex plot takes a lot of explaining at the end. Martini's not perfect, but he's still one of the best legal/adventure thriller writers going. --Nicholas H. Allison --Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.

From Publishers Weekly

Someday, someone may convince Martini or his publishers to come up with book titles that have a little more zip or at least relevance to the plot. Fortunately, the books themselves don't suffer from the same lack of inspiration. Martini's seventh series entry starring San Diego attorney Paul Madriani is one of his finest. It not only showcases Madriani as a man of maturing wisdom, but also as one who hasn't lost too much youthful vigor. Here, his client is the lithesome Dana Rush. She is the trophy wife of Madriani's good friend and fellow lawyer, Nick Rush, who is gunned down outside a downtown courthouse as the novel begins. In taking the case, Madriani feels an obligation to his friend; he wants to make sure Dana gets her just life insurance proceeds. But Madriani is equally as interested in investigating the events surrounding Nick's murder. What he finds-related deaths, drug smuggling, shady land deals and conniving law partners-takes Madriani on an unwholesome tour of Nick's final few months. The case leads Madriani and his law partner Harry Hinds to Mexico, where the action culminates in violence atop a Mayan ruin. Readers may have trouble tying it all together at the end, and they won't be too surprised at the identity of the villain. Yet along the way, Martini shows a deepening talent for character and description, which should put this popular series on continued solid footing for the future. Mystery Guild main selection, Literary Guild and Doubleday Book Club featured alternate.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc. --Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.

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34 évaluations
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2.9étoiles sur 5 (34 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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4.0étoiles sur 5 The Series Continues: The Arraignment by Steve Martini, Avril 6 2004
This review is from: The Arraignment (Hardcover)
Those familiar with the character Paul Madriani from earlier novels know that he has one iron clad rule regarding the cases he takes. He never, ever takes cases with drug defendants. As a widower with a daughter, Sarah who is now fifteen, it simply isn't worth it to him. The complications and the greed involved in such cases could easily get a lawyer killed.

That is one of his first thoughts about a client that his old friend Nick Rush wants Paul to meet. Nick claims that he can't take the case because of a conflict of interest involving himself, the client, and Nick's law firm of Rocker, Dusha and Dewine. Nick has his hands full with the after effects of a divorce, a marriage to a trophy wife who wants it all, and interoffice politics at the law firm. Things aren't working out and Nick really needs Paul's help.

But when Paul meets the client, Gerald Metz, who is the target of a federal grand jury, things don't ring true. Metz is a general contractor and claims that he was working on a deal with two sons of a powerful Mexico businessman to bring heavy equipment down from San Diego to Southern Mexico to build a resort. This does not make sense to Paul considering the economics involved and the story gets worse as Metz explains that the deal never went through but he was paid incredible amounts of money in consulting fees. Fees paid far in excess of what would be normal and were not handled in the proper manner. To Paul, it looks like a case of money laundering and most likely necessary because it has something to do with the drug trade.

Paul refuses the case and his suspicions seem correct a short time later as Nick and Metz are gunned down on the steps of the courthouse in a drive by. Nick feels responsible in the death of his friend because he did not take the case. Driven by guilt he begins to investigate and eventually the trail leads to Mexico and a violent confrontation at the top of what is left of an ancient Mayan Temple Pyramid.

Overall, this is an enjoyable novel that is amazing slow to get going. The latest in the series featuring Paul Mandraini does not shed any new light on the character. Sarah is non-existent in this novel, mentioned only in passing, as are several other characters from earlier novels. Additionally, this novel is written in a more distant, objective style that the earlier ones in this series which may also relate to the much slower than normal start to the work.

Those that stick with this novel which could be read independent of the series, will find this 400 page novel well worth the effort. The last 100 pages, which lead to the violent confrontation at the top of a Mayan Pyramid Temple, are full of twists and turns and plenty of action. Those last 100 pages alone make this novel well worth reading and very hard to put down.

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2.0étoiles sur 5 Not the best one, Avril 2 2004
This review is from: Arraignment (Paperback)
Don't you hate mystery books when about 100 pages from the end you figure out whodunit? That's exactly how it is with Steve Martini's "The Arraignment". This isn't a legal thriller, but rather a investigative Hardy Boys tale with many, many twists in the tale and generally, some weird, weird stuff popping up that, while making sense, requires the complete suspension of disbelief.

Martini an anvil-dropping author, which can slowly make you go crazy. He's so fond of writing something and then telling the reader what it means. For example, Martini will write an exchange very similar to the following:

"It is raining," Harry tells me. He's talking about the weather.

Read 300 pages of that and the reader will feel condescended to.

Tto make his thrillers more literary in value, he adds tons and tons of metaphors and similes that distract from his first person/present tense perspective.

Add on top of that, in this installment, Paul Madriani is so self-righteous, intelligent, and smug that he becomes absolutely insufferable. And oh yes, while Paul is traipsing around the jungles of Mexico, daughter Sarah is a complete afterthought, except for one misplaced paragraph towards the end. It's never a good sign when the reader is rooting for the hero of the novel to be dropped off the edge of a Mayan pyramid.

I've enjoyed Martini's books in the past, so this was quite the disappointment. "Compelling Evidence" and "Undue Influence" remain the most tightly plotted and well-paced of his novels.

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3.0étoiles sur 5 Lively but, ultimately, implausible, Fév 10 2004
Par HeyJudy "heyjudy" (East Hampton, NY USA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
This review is from: The Arraignment (Hardcover)
The best thing that I can say about THE ARRAIGNMENT is that it does not descend into yet another strained story about drug smuggling. Strained, perhaps, but not about drugs.

Author Steve Martini displays a thorough knowledge of laws and legal procedure, in addition to his lively imagination. As a result, he is able to craft a story that is quick-moving and compelling. Ultimately, however, the plot veers from simply unlikely to completely implausible.

The lawyer who is Martini's hero is almost too damned smart, smarter than an entire squad of New York City police detectives. Martini offers little motivation for the desperate need his hero is said to feel to solve the murder of a friend and, without motivation, the entire caper falls apart.

The hero also is far too willing to put himself at risk, especially for a character who is supposed to be the sole surviving parent of a teenage daughter. Toward the end of the mystery, the hero has a riff when he internally debates this same need with himself. This riff doesn't help make the plot more credible; instead, the reader actually can hear the author's editor saying that they must do better to provide rational motivation for the character.

The villain is predictable, the story is implausible and so is the hero, and the subplot about the murdered man's widow--hinted at throughout the novel--never is brought to any conclusion.

Other than these quibbles, THE ARRAIGNMENT is a swell read.

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Commentaires client les plus récents

3.0étoiles sur 5 Dana Rush loses height
On page 5, author Martini describes Dana Rush, the trophy wife, as "four inches taller than Nick" and "tall and tan. Read more
Publié le Janv. 25 2004

2.0étoiles sur 5 A Paul Madriani fan
I was disappointed by The Arraignment. In all the previous stories in the Paul Madriani series, plots are advanced and suspense is built through nicely crafted testimony and... Read more
Publié le Janv. 3 2004

2.0étoiles sur 5 Not that great
I picked up this paperback in the airport while my flight was delayed and had high hopes for it.

Like most have already said, the first half of the book looked good, but fell... Read more

Publié le Déc 4 2003 par xarthor

1.0étoiles sur 5 Disappointing!
The story started off with great promise. Then it just died. The last part is so disappointing that I can hardly finish reading it. Read more
Publié le Oct. 24 2003

2.0étoiles sur 5 Legal thriller that misses the mark
Heard the taped version of THE ARRAIGNMENT, a legal thriller
by Steve Martini . . . it again features a recurring character (defense
attorney Paul Madriani), yet this time... Read more
Publié le Oct. 19 2003 par Blaine Greenfield

3.0étoiles sur 5 More sleuth than lawyer
Paul Madriani and Harry Hinds come together in quasi-legal thriller. This book doesn't have the charm and tightness found in THE JURY. Read more
Publié le Sep 27 2003 par Douglas De Bono - Author of No...

2.0étoiles sur 5 Uneven
With Steve Martini's The Arraignment, I found a very uneven mystery. The characters seem flat and shallow, although maybe you have to read from the beginning of the Paul Madriani... Read more
Publié le Aoû 23 2003 par Cynthia K. Robertson

4.0étoiles sur 5 A Paul Madriani adventure
This book is different than the others in the Madriani series - which probably annoys most Madriani fans. It concentrates less on legal strategy, and more on adventure. Read more
Publié le Aoû 14 2003 par Paul Skinner

4.0étoiles sur 5 Paul Madriani is back!
In this compelling legal thriller Paul must find out who killed his friend on city streets. Madriani is one tough lawyer and his friends murder left up to him will not be... Read more
Publié le Juil 29 2003 par Carla Landreth

3.0étoiles sur 5 Shabby Martini: good first 3rd of book goes nowhere after
This is our fifth and last Steve Martini. Propelled by his first novel, "Simeon Chamber", which we enjoyed, we've tried four others with only lackluster results,... Read more
Publié le Juil 28 2003 par Gerald M. Bull

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