4 stars out of 5
In many respects, all the women I've known who battled the Big C have many things in common with Jane Smith, the star of this series. At the top of the list is a simple, yet complex fact: whether or not you have cancer, life goes on (until it doesn't). And Jane, like all of those other women, has chosen to play the best hand she can despite the lousy deal.This is the second book in the series featuring Jane, a hard-driving, highly successful defense attorney on Long Island. I did not read the first - heck, given the underlying subject, I was a little reluctant to read this one - but at no time did I feel at a disadvantage. The only reason I felt sort of lost here and there is that there are so many characters that I hard a tough time keeping them straight. The story begins after Jane's client, Rob Jacobson, was acquitted of murdering a family. But the victory celebration was short-lived when another family is bites the dust - and guess who is charged with their murder?
Jane learns of his arrest via a phone call from Jimmy Cuniff, her best guy friend, former NYPD detective who serves as her private investigator on cases. In part because she never really knew whether or not Jacobson actually was guilty the first time around, she's reluctant to take the case, but then she's always up for a good courtroom tussle. She gets the okay from her current squeeze, local veterinarian Dr. Ben Kalinsky, whose "good guy" vibes zinged off my credibility scale much of the time.
Although most of the folks around Jane try to convince her she's wasting her time and exhausting her limited physical capabilities by defending someone who doesn't deserve it, she waffles between thinking Jacobson is guilty and not guilty. As her investigation progresses she realizes there are characters out there who have a vested interest in taking him down for good this time. They also make it clear that they don't want Jane and Jimmy to be sticking their noses in other people's business - and that everyone around her is fair game if she doesn't quit the case.
More than that I can't reveal, but I can say the action doesn't take much of a break from beginning to the ending, which sets up a scenario for the next installment. I'll be waiting - and meantime I thank the publisher, via NetGalley, for the opportunity to get to know this hard-driving, multi-faceted character.
Hard to Kill by James Patterson and Mike Lupica (Little, Brown and Co., July 2024); 371 pp.
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