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Cane and Abe  Cover Image Book Book

Cane and Abe / James Grippando.

Summary:

Miami's top prosecutor becomes a prime suspect when his wife's disappearance may have a chilling connection to the vicious murders of beautiful women in the Florida Everglades. --From www.fantasticfiction.co.uk

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780062295392
  • ISBN: 006229539X
  • Physical Description: 356 pages ; 24 cm
  • Edition: First edition.
  • Publisher: New York : Harper, 2014.
Subject: Public prosecutors > Florida > Miami > Fiction.
Missing persons > Fiction.
Serial murders > Fiction.
Miami (Fla.) > Fiction.
Genre: Legal stories.
Suspense fiction.

Available copies

  • 16 of 16 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
  • 2 of 2 copies available at Sechelt/Gibsons. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Sechelt Public Library.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 16 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Sechelt Public Library F GRIP (Text) 3326000336194 Fiction Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2014 November #2
    Here's another fine stand-alone from the author of the Jack Swyteck legal thrillers. Abe Beckham, a Florida assistant state's attorney, has a tangled history: he's married to Angelina, but before that, he was married to Samantha, who died; and before that, he was in a relationship with Angelina. Oh, and there's Tyla, an attorney Abe had something going with several years ago, and who has just been murdered, apparently not long after making several calls to Abe's cell phone (he says he never got the calls). And there's a serial killer, dubbed Cutter, who might be responsible for Tyla's death, although a disagreeable FBI agent is convinced Abe's behind the murder, just as she's convinced Abe's responsible for the sudden disappearance of Angelina. Grippando writes the heck out of this labyrinthine story, keeping us flipping the pages at a frantic pace, trying to figure out what's going on here. Abe is a very well-drawn character—we're not quite sure whether we should like him or not—and somehow Grippando manages to answer all of the story's questions without making the end of the book feel contrived. Very nicely done. Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2015 February
    Whodunit: Not your little girl anymore

    Joakim Zander's terrific debut, The Swimmer, breaks the mold for Swedish suspense novels, which are so often police procedurals. This trans-global tale hews more closely to John le Carré or Olen Steinhauer than to Henning Mankell or Jo Nesbø. With settings as diverse as Syria, Afghanistan and Langley, Virginia (to name but a few), The Swimmer traces the occasionally intersecting arcs of a spy forced to abandon his infant daughter in the aftermath of an assassination attempt, and a young woman in possession of a lethal secret she has no desire to know. It's not giving too much away to say that the infant daughter and the young woman are the same person, separated by 33 years. Told largely in the third person, The Swimmer has first-person chapters strewn throughout, authored by the titular "Swimmer," who also happens to be the aforementioned spy. As spies go, he's a particularly literate one, and his descriptions are atmospheric and exotic. As is the case with most modern spy novels, there is a focus on terrorism and the ruthlessness of operatives on both sides. This is a first-class debut.

    EVIDENCE TO THE CONTRARY
    James Grippando's latest thriller, Cane and Abe, finds narrator Abe Beckham caught up in what the Brits would call "a spot of bother." First off, his one-time squeeze turns up murdered, her body dumped in Florida's alligator-infested Everglades. Beckham immediately becomes a person of interest. He's elevated to full-on suspect when his wife disappears under suspicious circumstances: First there was the shouting match; then the broken glass from a beer bottle found in the Beckham home that bears traces of his wife's blood type; then her smashed cell phone, found on a deserted section of Tamiami Trail. And if all that isn't enough, add to the mix Beckham's failed lie detector test. Overzealous cops, shady lawyers and a shadowy figure from Florida's Big Sugar industry round out the cast, and the tangled web they weave seems strategically poised to ensnare Beckham. The surprises never quit coming.

    STRANGERS AT A BAR
    Heathrow, the business-class lounge. A chance encounter between a wealthy businessman and an attractive woman. A pair of matching martinis. Some small talk: "Married?" he asks. "I'm not," she replies. "You?" "Yes, unfortunately." Out of that short interchange, and with the unguarded intimacy of fellow travelers who know that their time together is brief, the pair concoct a what‚ ëif scenario around the notion of the hastened demise of the businessman's wife. (We've all done this, right?) So begins Peter Swanson's The Kind Worth Killing, an intricate tale of murder planned and plans gone hopelessly awry. The narration is always in the first person, but the narrator changes again and again: businessman Ted; his comely martini companion, Lily; Ted's avaricious wife, Miranda; and, last but not least, a dogged cop named Kimball. All four have dirty secrets, and each is willing to betray at least one of the others to further his or her agenda. There are Hitchcockian overtones, as well as the sort of last-page narrative tweak that would undoubtedly bring a Mona Lisa smile to Sir Alfred's usually taciturn countenance.

    TOP PICK IN MYSTERY
    Scandinavia spawns first-rate mystery novelists the way Japan churns out championship figure skaters. I've been a huge fan (of both) for quite some time, but my first exposure to best-selling Danish author Sara Blaedel comes with her latest work, The Forgotten Girls. The title refers to developmentally challenged children whose parents found them to be too much trouble and dropped them off at a government facility, essentially writing them out of their family's narrative. Two of these forgotten girls were identical twins named Lise and Mette. According to their doctor's records, they died in childhood, only one minute apart. Problem is, 30 years later, one of their bodies turns up, fully grown, on the rocky shore of a forest lake. If one twin was still alive, is the other one as well? If so, where is she now? And how, if at all, does this death connect with the series of brutal murders that have taken place sporadically in the forest over the years? This is the puzzle that police investigator Louise Rick and journalist Camilla Lind must piece together, hopefully before the killer strikes again. Tautly suspenseful and sociologically fascinating, The Forgotten Girls demonstrates yet again that the finest contemporary suspense fiction emanates from Europe's snowbound North.

     

    This article was originally published in the February 2015 issue of BookPage. Download the entire issue for the Kindle or Nook.

    Copyright 2012 BookPage Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2014 November #2
    A stand-alone from the creator of adventurous lawyer Jack Swyteck (Black Horizon, 2014, etc.) that plumbs a Miami prosecutor's nightmare when a serial killer strikes a little too close to home.The Cutter, as he's been dubbed, has used a machete on four white women who'd dated black men, capping his gruesome murders by sprinkling ashes on his victims' foreheads. So why is his fifth victim highflying black attorney Tyla Tomkins, and where are the ashes this time? These are big problems, but Abe Beckham, a white senior trial counsel at the Miami-Dade Office of the State Attorney, is preoccupied with a more personal problem: how much FBI agent Victoria Santos, who's coordinating the hunt for the Cutter, will find out about his own relationship with Tyla. Abe, who married his old girlfriend Angelina after his African-American first wife, Samantha Vine, died, already has his hands full with Samantha's bipolar older brother, J.T., whose erratic behavior is constantly testing the pro mise Abe made his dying wife to look after him. Now he finds himself pondering possible links between the killings and the powerful Cortinas Sugar company and stressing out when Santos uncovers evidence that he'd seen Tyla a lot more recently than he'd told either her or Angelina. The pot comes to a rolling boil when Angelina vanishes shortly after capping a fight with Abe by throwing him out of their house. Has Abe killed his missing wife? Is her disappearance an attempt to incriminate him? Is Abe the Cutter? Did he kill Tyla as a copycat? And if he isn't and he didn't, who's gone to such trouble to frame him? If only the answers to these questions were as good as the questions. As it is, Grippando supplies a satisfyingly wild ride through Presumed Innocent territory before the inevitable letdown. Copyright Kirkus 2014 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2014 April #1

    When a woman's mutilated body is discovered in the Everglades, Abe Beckham, a top prosecutor at the Miami State Attorney's Office, becomes a top suspect. He'd had an encounter with the woman after his wife Samantha's untimely death, and his new wife, Angelina, has vanished, too. With a 30,000-copy first printing.

    [Page 66]. (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
  • LJ Express Reviews : LJ Express Reviews
    Representing the Office of the State Attorney for Miami-Dade County, Abe Beckham is called to a crime scene; the body of a woman had been found in the Everglades. The FBI suspects it is the fifth victim of a serial killer terrorizing south Florida who dumps his bodies in sugar cane fields. As Abe monitors this new case, he also juggles the complications of his family life. Losing his first wife to cancer, he has done his best to move on and has married a former girlfriend. However, Abe's close ties to his first wife's brother and father is straining his relationship with his second wife. The situation grows grim when Abe must disclose that he knew the victim; he becomes even more of a suspect when his wife disappears. Now Abe must find out what happened as the FBI watches his every move. Verdict Best-selling author and attorney Grippando, known for his "Jack Swyteck" series, has produced a solid, quick-paced stand-alone thriller. His incorporation of the appalling history of the sugar cane industry provides an integral backdrop. For readers who enjoy Greg Iles or Brad Meltzer.—Joy Gunn, Paseo Verde Lib., Henderson, NV (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2014 November #4

    Abe Beckham, the narrator of much of this gripping but flawed stand-alone from bestseller Grippando (Need You Now), still mourns the death of his first wife, Samantha Vine. That's why Abe, senior trial counsel at the state attorney's office in Miami-Dade County, keeps close contact with Samantha's family. This closeness doesn't sit well with his second wife, Angelina, who wants him to cut all ties with the Vines. Abe complicates his professional life by monitoring the murder investigation of an old flame, Miami attorney Tyla Tomkins, whose mangled body was found in the Everglades. Is Tyla a victim of the machete-wielding serial killer known as Cutter? When Angelina disappears, FBI agent Victoria Santos wonders whether Abe was still romantically involved with Tyla. Grippando keeps the tension high with plausible twists, until the plot comes apart in a rushed ending. Agent: Richard Pine, Inkwell Management. (Jan.)

    [Page ]. Copyright 2014 PWxyz LLC

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