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Desperate Measures (Barbara Holloway Novels (Audio))

Desperate Measures (Barbara Holloway Novels (Audio))

List Price: $62.95
Your Price: $62.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A geat read
Review: Alexander Feldman was born with the face of a monster. To make matters worse, his beautiful-looking vain parents wanted him out of their sight. At fourteen, unable to accept further rejection or the stunned stares, Alex tried suicide. He failed and Dr. Graham Mirick accepts responsibility for the distressed teen.

The duo moves to Oregon where Alex learns to channel his anger and soon grows into an outstanding citizen though he stays by himself. However, a young girl tells a series of lies that leads to a chain of events culminating with the police charging Alex with murder. Barbara Holloway agrees to defend Alex on a case that she knows she will lose if she can't find some holes in the prosecution's case.

Kate Wilhelm is one of the Supreme Court members when it comes to legal procedures that grab the interest of the audience. Her latest tale includes a female Perry Mason(ette) for the new century. Using the theme of not judging a book by its cover, the man with the monster's visage is the most beautiful character in DESPERATE MEASURES (think of The Man Without a Face).

Harriet Klausner

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: IT'S A TALE AS OLD AS TIME--RETOLD AS A LEGAL THRILLER
Review: As a mystery writer with my debut novel in its initial release, I admire Kate Wilhelm's clever reworking of The Beauty and the Beast. In DESPERATE MEASURES, Barbara Holloway finds herself at first in opposition to her father, Frank. Gus Marchand is murdered, and there are two suspects. Frank's client dies mysteriously, yet Frank does not want the blame for the Marchand homicide to be placed on his client. Barbara's client, for awhile, remains nameless. She is highly protective of the man who turns out to be Alex Feldman, a horribly disfigured man who had been previously accused of stalking the murdered man's teenaged daughter. The plot grows complicated, and Alex is obviously carrying secrets. Shelley, an associate of Barbara's, sees beyond Alex's disfigurement and into his heart. Yet the murder must still be solved. Great book. One of Wilhelm's best.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Very disappointing - too much bias
Review: As usual, Ms. Wilhelm created a great story, with plenty of twists and turns to keep the mind guessing. However, it smacked of bias.

The character of the murdered man, Gus Marchand, is flat. He's just a bad guy. He calls himself a Christian, but he is a hateful, bigoted, controlling man who demeans his wife and beats his children. There is no other side to this man, no balance, no reason for why he is such a person. It is as though Marchand has no good feelings about anything or anyone, and everything he has ever done is bad. Towards the end of the book, Barbara Holloway blames Marchand for everything, even the murder of a woman by her lover who feared he would be exposed, because "Gus Marchand was a zealot who was determined to impose his belief system on everyone around him."

In fact, anyone clearly identified as a Christian is painted with a broad brush of bias. The wife is a weak-willed woman willing to submit to Marchand's domination of the home and abusive manner towards those in the community who don't share his beliefs. The pastor of the Baptist church Marchand attended saw Marchand as a good, honest man who never lied, a hero in the home, and at the end of his testimony in court, he appeared the buffoon as he loudly launched into a prayer to protect the daughter from the devil. Many of the townspeople, who were also members of Marchand's church in the rural Oregon town, blindly followed along with his hateful rhetoric, and were too often just stupid.

Characters not associated as Christians were real people, humans that showed compassion, felt pain and anger, had high principles but demonstrated flaws, and so on. So much was well-written: one felt ill for the hatred and abuse Alex had wrongly received over the years. Unfortunately, it just appeared to have too much bias against one group to suit my tastes.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: leaves you wanting more!
Review: Barbara Holloway takes on yet another difficult, unusual case. But this time her father is on the same case. Different suspect. Can they sort out their relationship enough to remain father and daughter? Or will the lawyer in them both make life unbearable as each tries to make their case for their client?

Fantastic character development and descriptions.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: leaves you wanting more!
Review: Barbara Holloway takes on yet another difficult, unusual case. But this time her father is on the same case. Different suspect. Can they sort out their relationship enough to remain father and daughter? Or will the lawyer in them both make life unbearable as each tries to make their case for their client?

Fantastic character development and descriptions.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Disparate Measures
Review: I concur with the reviewer who noted Wilhelm's one-demensional treatment of Christian characters, as opposed to the depth with which she treats characters who either espouse no religion or are not identified as belonging to a particular religious sect. It smacks of intellectual laziness to take the easy route and ridicule those whose deeply held religious beliefs placed them at odds with (in this case) the education establishment. While it's true that nobody is perfect, and it would be just as unfortunate if Wilhelm had attributed perfection to these characters, the story would have been far better had the Marchand parents and other Christian characters been painted with more than one color.

Those considering the unabridged audio version of this book might want to make another selection. I'm not sure whether Marguerite Gavin always narrates like this, or whether she was just having a bad day, but her work is alternately jarring, grating, and outright bad when it comes to her (mis)pronounciation of well-known Pacific Northwest geography. One such example is her pronounciation of "Willamette," which will drive anyone familiar with the Northwest, the Willamette River, or Willamette University up the proverbial wall.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An unusual premise
Review: In this mystery,Kate Wilhelm uses a disfigured man as the main suspect for a murder and as the story unfolds she makes us aware of how much importance society places on looks.I thought this was an unusual premise for a murder mystery.As always her books are suspenseful,surprising and this story also has a happy ending.I highly recommend this author especially if you love the Pacific Northwest.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A tale of fear and prejudice...
Review: is crafted by Kate Wilhelm in the 6th legal thriller in this series.

Alex Feldman, victim of an unfortunate birth, still manages to live a rich and full life with the help of his doctor-mentor, Graham Minick. There is no question in the reader's mind that Alex did not murder his neighbor, Gus Marchand, a man who hides his bigotry and small-mindedness behind the cloak of his religion. Because of Alex's strange appearance and history, however, the law enforcement agency and the townspeople of Opal Creek, Oregon persecute and prosecute him for the crime.

Barbara Holloway and her father Frank find themselves in an adversarial position on the crime. Barbara's secret client is Alex, and Frank is trying to protect an old friend, who is subsequently murdered in the second of two mysteries, from being accused of the crime.

The events and conflict leading up to the courtroom confrontation are merely a canvas for the excellent and crisp writing that Wilhelm uses to portray the courtroom battle. Before it is over, Kate and Frank have joined forces, and the ending is much more satisfactory than a not guilty verdict would have been.

Wilhelm commands and holds your interest, without gratuitous sex or violence in her novels. Her main character, Barbara Holloway, is a gutsy, intelligent, and articulate attorney. Wilhelm never fails to surround her with an equally interesting cast.

Desperate Measures is an excellent read that keeps you guessing and successfully weaves a double mystery plot. Enjoy!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Tense Courtroom Drama
Review: Oregon Criminal defense attorney, Barbara Holloway, always likes the challenge of a tough case, but this time she's definitely in for the fight of her life. It seems Gus Marchand, an overbearing and tyrannical religious zealot was found dead in his kitchen, slammed in the head with a hammer. All suspicion falls on Alex Feldman, a horribly disfigured recluse and neighbor of the victim whom Marchand had tormented for years, calling him the devil freak or devil spawn. The evidence, what little there is, is all circumstantial. But because of bigotry and fear in this rural community, Alex, an easy target, is arrested and charged with the murder. Now it's up to Barbara, her father and mentor, Frank, and the rest of her defense team to find the truth and set Alex free..... Kate Wilhelm has written a tight, compelling legal thriller full of twists, turns and surprises that will keep readers turning pages to the end. Her crisp, tense writing is suspenseful with vivid and riveting scenes and her characters are well drawn "real" people. Ms Wilhelm's indepth knowledge of the workings of the law and legal procedures adds real credibility to the story and her courtroom scenes really come alive on the page. Add to that clever secondary plot lines to flesh out and enhance the story, a stunning climax and very satisifying ending that ties up all the loose ends, and you have the makings of a thriller that shouldn't be miss. Desperate Measures is a winner!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Grabs You!
Review: Oregon defense attorney Barbara Holloway finds herself at odds with her mentor father, Frank, when the murder of a mean-spirited religious zealot and family despot lands each with a client. Frank's client, the high school principal and an old friend, has a married lover and Gus Marchand, the murdered man, had threatened to expose her. But Barbara's client, young Alex Feldman, despite scant evidence, is the prime suspect.

Born with a hideous facial deformity, he was denounced by Marchand, his neighbor, as the devil's spawn and a sexual predator. Alex's adolescent history of violent outbursts doesn't help. The son of shallow, beautiful people whose idea of sympathy was to hide him in his room, Alex is rescued after a teenage suicide attempt by Dr. Graham Minick, who takes him to live in rural Oregon. Now, 14 years later, (still with Minick) Alex is the successful author/artist of a pseudonymous satirical cartoon strip, a career which would be threatened if his identity was revealed.

Wilhelm frames a thoughtful, moderately suspenseful story of detection and legal maneuvering around a core of repression in the name of religion, bigotry, and instinctual aversion. Born with, basically, half a face, Alex inspires visceral hostility in everyone who sets eyes on him, a reaction Barbara, along with her co-workers and father, must overcome. With time and familiarity, the man emerges from behind the deformity. A sensitive "Beauty and the Beast" story, exploring the roots of violence in alienation and one man's lucky escape from a blighted life, Wilhelm's novel strikes a resonant chord. A credible plot, a smart, engaging protagonist and well-rounded secondary characters in this sixth Holloway novel add up to another success for the award-winning Wilhelm, author of the science fiction classic, "Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang" and "The Good Children."


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