Monday, May 06, 2019

Aubrey Hamilton Reviews: The Ex by Alafair Burke


After a successful legal career, Alafair Burke started writing mysteries. She has two series to her credit, one that features a Portland, Oregon, district attorney and the other with a New York police detective. More recently she’s been writing stand-alone crime fiction, the latest of which was released in April. I went back in time a bit and read the third of her nonseries novels, The Ex (Harper, 2016).
This strong legal thriller opens when Olivia Randall, a successful defense attorney in New York, is called by the teenage daughter of her college fiancé whom she dumped shortly after graduation. The daughter demands that Randall defend her father, who has been taken to police headquarters on suspicion of murder. Along with two other victims, the father of a young man who committed a random shooting in a New York train station three years earlier has himself been killed. Jack Harris lost his wife in that train station mass murder and has been pursuing legal action against the father for supplying guns to his troubled son. That Harris was in the vicinity at the time the father was killed clinches the case in the mind of the police.
Randall is convinced, despite the intervening 20 years, that she still knows Harris well enough to know he could not be guilty, and she jumps headlong into his defense. All the while she relives their earlier relationship and the circumstances that finally led to its end. This is a compelling legal procedural on one level and on another a study of how people who are close still manage to misread and misinterpret each other. A great double plot twist at the end.
Finalist for MWA’s 2017 Best Mystery award. Library Journal starred review.



·         Hardcover: 304 pages
·         Publisher: Harper; First Edition (January 26, 2016)
·         Language: English
·         ISBN-10: 0062390481
·         ISBN-13: 978-0062390486


Aubrey Hamilton ©2019

Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.

No comments:

Post a Comment