John Lescroart
is one of my favorite contemporary U.S. authors. I can’t think of another
author who conveys the complexities and contradictions of long-term human
relationships better than he does. He claimed San Francisco and its legal and
law enforcement community for his own in the 22 (so far) books he wrote about
Dismas Hardy, a defense attorney, and his best friend Abe Glitsky, a homicide
cop. Lescroart tells complicated stories in clear, down-to-earth language. His
plots unfold logically while maintaining momentum. I especially appreciate the
realism; Hardy is open about the cost of a legal defense. There’s nothing
quixotic about him. I have read all of the books in the series and in the
spin-off books about Hardy’s private investigator Wyatt Hunt. I like them so
much that I re-read them occasionally.
The Motive (Dutton,
2004) is the 11th book in the series. It starts with a fire in one
of the iconic Painted Ladies, the exquisitely painted Victorian homes near
Alamo Square Park. Because of the proximity of the buildings, any blaze
threatens the entire neighborhood and galvanizes the fire department. In this
instance, the house where it started could not be saved and homes on either
side were damaged. In the ashes were found two bodies, each with a fatal bullet
wound. They were identified as home owner wealthy Paul Hanover and his fiancé Missy
D’Amiens. While it looked like a murder-suicide, the angle of the shots
suggested otherwise. The pervasive presence of gasoline clinched the
determination of homicide.
Hanover had donated
heavily to mayor Kathy West’s election so she pulled strings and had deputy
chief of inspectors Abe Glitzky assigned to the case. The lead detective
resented Glitzky and his political influence, which slowed the investigation.
Then suspicion fell on Hanover’s daughter-in-law, who had been vocally
concerned about Hanover’s plan to change his will in favor of his new second
wife. She invoked her long-ago relationship with Dismas Hardy to persuade him
to represent her. Glitzky and Hardy navigate a rocky path between the shadow of
mayoral influence with accusations of political bias and complex personal
interactions.
Great detail about arson investigation and fire forensics. Clever misdirection delivers a courtroom bombshell. Glitzky’s and Hardy’s enduring friendship forms the bedrock of this very good series. It’s possible to read these books out of order without losing much context, but they make more sense if read sequentially. For fans of legal thrillers.
·
Publisher: Dutton Adult; 1st
edition (December 16, 2004)
·
Language: English
·
Hardcover: 416 pages
·
ISBN-10: 0525948449
·
ISBN-13: 978-0525948445
Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2023
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on
Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
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