The Judgment
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.59 (747 Votes) |
Asin | : | B00005LKUO |
Format Type | : | |
Number of Pages | : | 492 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2016-07-11 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
J. Janko said should we or should we not trust the reviewers. It's been a year since I have read the Judgment and I have just finished reading his next book, Legacy. I wasn't much thrilled with either book and was all the more surprised to see the 5 stars or should we or should we not trust the reviewers J. Janko It's been a year since I have read the Judgment and I have just finished reading his next book, Legacy. I wasn't much thrilled with either book and was all the more surprised to see the 5 stars or 4 stars reviews written for both books. Then I noticed that most of the reviews come from reviewers very highly rated by the Amazon.com websi. stars reviews written for both books. Then I noticed that most of the reviews come from reviewers very highly rated by the Amazon.com websi. John R. Linnell said Buffa's Boffo!!!!. This is the third book this author has written and I have read and very much enjoyed them all. He is without peer in describing courtroom action and the dialogue is spot on, both in it's literary quality and it's legal accuracy. This is an interesting mix of love and revenge which finds Attorney Joseph Atonelli right in the center of th. "Antonelliclever, skilled & awesome - a man for all seasons Russell A. Rohde MD "The Judgment", Dudley W. Buffa, NY, Warner Books, 2001 ISBN 0-446-52737-8, HC, 418 pg., 9 1/4" x 6 1/4".This 3rd Joesph Antonelli novel finds the protagonist defense attorney ruminating about the evil nature of Judge Calvin Jeffries, a man recently murdered & whose funeral is in session. Afterwards, Antonelli is beseiged to reveal his
When Judge Calvin Jeffries becomes the first judge to be murdered while serving in office, charismatic criminal defense attorney Joseph Antonelli finds himself smack in the middle of a riveting case.
So convinced is he of Danny's innocence that he plunges undercover into the vagrant's world, searching for evidence of a setup. The subplot involving the return of Antonelli's high-school sweetheart, however, feels less integral than afterthought-ish. When author D.W. The fact that Jeffries was a thoroughly reprehensible human being doesn't detract from the notoriety of the first murder of a sitting Oregon judge. But one of Antonelli's colleagues suffered even more. When another homeless man is arrested, Antonelli's "bizarre coincidence" antennae start to quiver, and he offers his services to the defendant. But his discoveries seem to point directly to the impossible--for how could Elliott Winston, safely tucked behind bars, be the murderer? At some