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Cold Hit
  

Cold Hit (Hardcover)

de Linda A. Fairstein (Author) "It was after eight o'clock, and all I could see of the sun was its gleaming crown as it slipped behind the row of steep..." En savoir plus
3.6étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (26 évaluations de client)

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From Amazon.com

When Linda Fairstein describes the route Alexandra Cooper takes from the district attorney's office to NYPD headquarters, you know she's walked that way many times herself. "I took the shortcut over to One Police Plaza, cutting behind the Metropolitan Correctional Center and alongside the staggeringly expensive new federal courthouse, which made our digs, complete with oversized rodents and roaches that obviously thrived on Combat, look like judicial facilities in some third world country."

Like her fictional counterpart, Fairstein is a Manhattan assistant district attorney in charge of a sex-crimes unit. As she did in Final Jeopardy and Likely to Die, Fairstein mires her somewhat unlikely heroine (a beautiful 35-year-old blond with an Ivy League education, a house in Martha's Vineyard, and an affection for betting on quiz shows at cop bars) in a wealth of procedural detail. The "cold hit" of the title, for example, refers to a computer match between DNA samples from a recent rape case with evidence from an older crime.

With her trusty cop sidekicks Mike Chapman (who eats everything in sight and drops wisecracks like they're crumbs) and Mercer Wallace (who is a big fellow and can take a bullet meant for Alex without flinching), Cooper is working on two major cases--a serial rapist who has suddenly decided to come out of hiding and a couple of murders linked to the nasty underground world of fine-art sales. But she also has time to give her fellow sex-crime prosecutors advice on how to handle everything from a man shooting video up women's skirts at a Star Trek convention to a guy who takes his love for racehorses well past the legal limits. Once again, Fairstein has produced a story whose entertainment value is very high. --Dick Adler --Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.



From Publishers Weekly

The discovery at Manhattan's northern tip of the body of a woman tied to a ladder leads Assistant District Attorney Alexandra "Alex" Cooper, head of the borough's Sex Crimes Unit (as is her creator, Fairstein), and her associates, NYPD Detectives Mike Chapman and Mercer Wallace, on a circuitous trek through the rarefied but far from savory New York art world. Denise CaxtonAcollector, co-owner of a gallery and estranged wife of wealthy connoisseur Lowell CaxtonAseemed to want for nothing, but as Alex and her team dig into the victim's background, they uncover contradictions and conflicts in her privileged existence. What part did gallery partner Bryan Daughtrey or antiques expert Frank Wrenley play in the dead woman's life? Her investigation into Denise's shady deals come to endanger Alex, and the lives of those close to her as well. Fairstein (Final Jeopardy; Likely to Die) once again uses her own experience and knowledge of the city to strong advantage in balancing the case at hand with the day-to-day workings of the system. Her thick layerings of the legal background at times slow the action, but they add immeasurably to the reader's understanding and appreciation of what is entailed in making a case. Fairstein's rough-and-tumble courthouse scenes ring true, as do her descriptions of the mundane police work of Mercer and Mike, whose easy wisecracking and addiction to the television show Jeopardy are a cover for their affection for each other and Alex. Alex herself remains a shining protagonist, comfortable in the upper echelons of New York society but eager to roll up her sleeves at work, her heart aching for her staff and the victims they defend. Fans of the assistant D.A.'s previous adventures will be mightily pleased with this one. Mystery Guild main selection; Literary Guild and Doubleday Book Club alternate selections; 7-city author tour. (Sept.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.

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It was after eight o'clock, and all I could see of the sun was its gleaming crown as it slipped behind the row of steep cliffs, giving off an iridescent pink haze that signaled the end of a long August day. Lire la première page
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26 évaluations
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3.6étoiles sur 5 (26 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Alex Cooper keeps going like the Energizer Bunny, Mars 8 2004
Par Paul Ammann (New Fairfield, CT United) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Cold Hit (Mass Market Paperback)
This lady goes from strength to strength. Once again we see Alexandra Cooper, the Assistant District Attorney for the Sex Crimes Unit of Manhattan. Only this time she finds herself with a body being pulled out of the river, but the woman is expensively dressed and tied to a ladder, with no identification.

It is not the easiest of cases, we find all kinds of skullduggery in the genteel art world, with forgery and faked provenance and Alex gets a bit too close to the murderer in this one, only narrowly escaping being shot, although unfortunately Mercer Wallace is hit, which is all rather too real.

I never imagined Art Galleries to inspire the kind of passions that abound in this book, I know that money will drive people to extremes and this is well illustrated here, but this really is the ugly side to beautiful artworks.

Nevertheless, as a subject for murder, it is a gripping plot. I know that sidekicks are not as immune as central characters, but Mercer and Mike are too central to be the victim of homicidal lunatics, but here we see that they can have a little scare, just to remind us that it is a terrible place for the good guys.

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4.0étoiles sur 5 An artistically-done caper...literally!, Mai 21 2003
Par K. L Sadler (Freedom, Pa. USA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Cold Hit (Mass Market Paperback)
Fairstein is a recent find for me. Her background into the real world of violent sex crimes is usually a field that make me extremely uncomfortable. But Fairstein does a good job in explaining the reality of that world without dwelling on it unnecessarily. Thank you for that.

This particular novel deals with the seamy side of the art world. I knew it existed from reading nonfiction on it, as well as other mysteries dealing with it--it seems to be a popular subject at the moment. Is it happening more often, or are we just more aware of it? The plot basically boils down to the fact that certain art has been stolen and missing for over ten years. The person found murdered originally may possibly have had some connection to the resurfacing of this artwork. Then Mike and Alex (the ADA) take it from there.

I got a kick out of some of the background into both the art world (the propensity to cover up valuable paintings/illuminated manuscripts seems to be a real problem) and also into the information concerning the railway system in New York. I've been reading the nonfiction book "Gangs of New York" so this information played into the understanding I got from that book. To me, the more well-written history in a mystery...the better I like it.

This book got a little confusing after a while. Too many people, too many paintings to keep track of. My favorite parts of the book deal with Alex's coworkers, especially Mike who reminds me greatly of one of my mentors in my HIV lab, who was also a practical joke player and wisecracker. This deep detail into characterization always pleases me with mysteries or any book. It is part of what make a good book come alive. This book was more 'alive' then others I've read recently because of good characterization, but the plot line was a little obtuse. Anyway, it was a fun read...

Karen Sadler

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2.0étoiles sur 5 Missing the Mystery, Janv. 29 2003
Par Joseph J. Benik (Frederick, MD USA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
This review is from: Cold Hit (Mass Market Paperback)
Linda Fairstein's latest is another Alex Cross, excuse me, Alex Cooper mystery with the protagonist working more closely with police than any DA unit chief ever would, especially in a city like New York. This time Cooper is involved in a high-stakes art caper that leads to a woman's dead body washing up at the end of Manhattan.
Fairstein knows her subject, and the grittiness of the police detail and dialogue reflect it. But she also falls all over herself to give Fairstein a wonderfully glamorous lifestyle which has her casually dining in the finest Manhattan restaurants and whisking off for a weekend at "the Cape" with her globetrotting TV News boyfriend. I'm not certain if this is the way that Fairstein really lived while on the job, but if it was, she shouldn't have traded it in for the typewriter.
Still, Cooper's relationship with her cop friends, especially wisecracking Mike Chapman and standup guy Mercer Wallace is interesting, especially when Jeopardy is on the tube. Otherwise, COLD HIT is a slow-paced mystery story with no more plot twists than your average episode of Law and Order. The book left me, well, cold.
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Commentaires client les plus récents

1.0étoiles sur 5 Cold Hit
Stick with Phillip Margolin and John Grisham. Very boring. You will get tired of reading about what liquor the main character drinks and how cultured she is.... Read more
Publié le Juil 30 2002 par klinema

2.0étoiles sur 5 Very poor audio book
I listened to Cold Hit from the abridged commercial audiobook, so I won't comment on the writing style, as what I heard may not be representative of the original written prose. Read more
Publié le Avril 19 2002 par Cystem Phailure

1.0étoiles sur 5 BORING and arrogant IN THE EXTREME
If you like reading about the wealthy, the painted arts and restaurants this books for you. It's more of a dinning
out in NY guide and what and where the filthy rich do and... Read more
Publié le Avril 8 2002

4.0étoiles sur 5 Less Grit, More Elegance
Linda Fairstein's third book in the Alex Cooper series is a sophisticated foray into the high-stakes international world of art. Read more
Publié le Janv. 26 2002 par W. Carol

4.0étoiles sur 5 Cold Hit a big hit im my book
Linda FairsteinÕs Cold Hit is authentic New York City like a slap in the face, or a boot in the behind. Read more
Publié le Fév 20 2001 par Joe Bruno

5.0étoiles sur 5 Oh, my . . .
What a find in Linda Fairstein! I read Final Jeopardy and enjoyed the book. (I picked it up because I am a "Jeopardy" fan. Read more
Publié le Oct. 18 2000 par Louise C. Stone

4.0étoiles sur 5 Cold Hit, spot on.
I was always a big fan of Patricia Cornwall, and her review on this book was enough to make me buy it. Read more
Publié le Sep 17 2000 par SAMANTHA J VAZQUEZ

4.0étoiles sur 5 art lesson
the reality of politics and perceptions in law enforcement. sumptuous columbo-like setting of the nyc art world. Read more
Publié le Aoû 27 2000 par donatdeux

2.0étoiles sur 5 The same mix, but disappointing this time
I looked forward to the second novel by Linda Fairstein, featuring her heroine, A.D.A. Alexandra Cooper. But I'm afraid I won't be rushing out to look for the third. Read more
Publié le Jui 19 2000 par Lewis Martin

4.0étoiles sur 5 New York ambiance and snappy dialogue, but the plot falters.
Linda Fairstein knows her turf. She has been a prosecutor of sexual crimes in New York City under the fabled Manhattan District Attorney, Bob Morgenthau, for many years. Read more
Publié le Avril 2 2000 par E. Bukowsky

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