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Terry Devane : A Stain Upon the Robe
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Author: Terry Devane
Title: A Stain Upon the Robe
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Published in: English
Binding: Mass Market Paperback
Pages: 352
Date: 2004-08-03
ISBN: 0425197425
Publisher: Berkley
Weight: 0.35 pounds
Size: 4.2 x 6.5 x 1.1 inches
Edition: First Edition
Previous givers: 2 Sleepy554 (USA: FL), Ozrkgirlie (USA: MO)
Previous moochers: 2 Ron Smyth (Canada), JDame (USA: ME)
Wishlists:
2Stitchintime (USA: IL), novelwriter (Mel) (USA: SC).
Description: Product Description
Terry Devane, "a welcome new voice in crime writing" (Michael Palmer) is back, as trial attorney Mairead O'Clare delves into a case involving a priest, a shocking scandal, and a judge with a disturbing past all her own.
Reviews: Sleepy554 (USA: FL) (2009/10/17):
From Amazon.com
From Publishers Weekly
Despite its creaky, sensationalistic plot, Devane's third legal thriller (after Juror Number Eleven) satisfies, largely on the strength of its leads. This time, smart, depressive criminal defense attorney Sheldon Gold is approached by old flame Judge Barbara Pitt, who's presiding over the page-one trial of a Catholic priest accused of raping 23 boys. Judge Pitt says she's mystified by the recent disappearance of her hunky young research clerk, Charles Vareika, after admitting to sleeping with him. Afraid of a Gary Condit-type scandal, Pitt implores Shel to find Vareika without implicating her or tanking the trial. Shel mobilizes his usual team: Mairead O'Clare, the naive but tough young associate; Pontifico (the Pope) Murizzi, a street-smart, gay ex-cop turned private investigator; and Billie Sunday, a legal secretary with impeccable instincts and candid opinions. The pseudonymous Devane constructs the plot through a rather blocky series of interviews, as the team makes its rounds interrogating Vareika's unsavory friends, Pitt's cagey family members, several trial-watchers with competing agendas and the accused priest himself. Characters tend to speechify rather than speak; the priest takes a page from Hannibal Lecter when he insists on meeting Mairead in his lockup (" `I really enjoy telling [my story], young lady.' Now [he] pressed his nose against the screen, distorting his face into a gargoyle's mask. `I really, really do' "). Devane compensates for much of this artificiality by demonstrating hands-on intimacy with Boston's criminal justice system and by creating soulful, savvy, appealing protagonists who manage to excel at their jobs, despite the heartbreak in their private lives.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Booklist
The stained vestment of the title actually belongs to two professions: the clergy and the law. Eccentric heroine Mairead O'Clare--brought up by nuns in an orphanage, plagued by disfiguring port wine stains, and currently using her wary nature as a criminal attorney in a big Boston law firm--assists boss Sheldon Gold in a case that grows more disturbing with each discovery. A superior court judge has asked Gold to investigate the disappearance of her law clerk and lover on the eve of her trial of a Catholic priest accused of multiple child molestations. The romance has overtones of Gary Condit and Chandra Levy, a fact that could turn the trial into a media circus. O'Clare's investigation is like a minitour of Dante's circles of hell, as she confronts the horrors of priest pedophilia and waves of legal and political corruption. A gripping, though sometimes overwrought investigative and courtroom drama. Connie Fletcher
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.



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