The First Law By John Lescroart: Book Review

Posted by Leslie Pratch; written by Mark Johnson John Lescroart’s slightly shabby white knight, defense attorney Dismas Hardy, is back. “The First Law” represents a change of direction, however. There is relatively little law practice; there is precious little law abiding, for that matter. Private police forces (yes, they exist in the city) are in [...]

Intern By Bonnie Hearn Hill: Book Review

Posted by Leslie Pratch; written by Mark Johnson What we have here is a story about a young intern who turns up missing after having an affair with a powerful San Joaquin Valley legislator. If you’re thinking this is a thinly veiled rehash of the Chandra Levy case, you’re right—and wrong. Hill, a Fresno journalist, [...]

The Revenant By Michael Punke: Book Review

Posted by Leslie Pratch; written by Mark Johnson “The Revenant” is my sleeper novel of the summer, a simple, powerful tale based on a true story. In 1823, Hugh Glass joins a fur-company expedition up the wild Missouri River. Severely wounded by a bear, Hugh is abandoned to die by his two companions—one of them [...]

The Devil’s Redhead By David Corbett: Book Review

Posted by Leslie Pratch; written by Mark Johnson Professional killers are all the fashion these days. I must have received a dozen new novels in the past few months in which the heroes were murderers—bright, successful, charismatic and working for the right side, but still murderers. The funny thing is, this works. I’m won over [...]

Rain Fall By Barry Eisler: Book Review

Posted by Leslie Pratch; written by Mark Johnson Talk about baggage; John Rain has a load. The son of a Japanese father and an American mother, he was bullied as a boy in both countries. In Vietnam he learned he was a natural fighter, but he did things—we don’t know what for many pages—that he [...]

Reaction to the Horror Genre

Edited by Leslie Pratch; written by Mark Johnson Is it my twisted imagination, or is there at least a minor backlash going on against the gore of the horror genre?  “Superstition,” by David Ambrose is the latest and among the best of the more cerebral, character-driven and sophisticated supernatural thrillers that have been showing up [...]

Gossip By Kelly Lange: Book Review

Posted by Leslie Pratch; written by Mark Johnson When Trisha, Kate, Lang and Molly graduate in ’79 from exclusive Briarcliffe College, Trisha’s rich dad “gifts” them (I hate that word) with matching telephone answering machines so they can always stay in touch. That’s the overarching conceit of “Gossip” by Los Angeles television anchorwoman Kelly Lange, [...]

The Hammer in Eden By Ken Follett: Book Review

Posted by Leslie Pratch; written by Mark Johnson Thrillers and adventure novels are filled with natural disasters. We love our hurricanes and tornadoes, our floods and tsunamis, our forest fires and volcanoes, our occasional asteroid on a collision course with Manhattan. Although the earthquake is the quintessential lurking fear of Californians, it has been a [...]

The Alternate By John Martel: Book Review

Posted by Leslie Pratch; written by Mark Johnson John Martel is a Santa Cruz and San Francisco resident, named by the National Law Journal as one of the top 10 trial lawyers in America, brings his expertise to bear in “The Alternate.” He tosses together a high-profile murder case, big-city and California politics, organized crime [...]

Fleur de Leigh’s Life of Crime By Diane Leslie: Book Review

Posted by Leslie Pratch; written by Mark Johnson It’s a great title: “Fleur de Leigh’s Life of Crime.” But when I had finished Diane Leslie’s witty, sweet, curiously moving novel, I had to ask myself: What was Fleur’s crime? Let’s start at the beginning. Fleur de (the name is her parents’ little joke—Fleur rejects the [...]