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Loading... The Spire: A Novelby Richard North Patterson
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. I found the relationship with his mentor's daughter, whom he first met when she was seven years old and he was a high-school senior, to be kind of creepy. Actually there was a lot of the plot that was kind of creepy. ( ) Billed as a psychological thriller, this one falls short. Set on a midwestern college campus, whose landmark is the Spire, a former football hero is named president. Mark Darrow returns to deal with embezzlement and his guilt over his best friend serving a life sentence for a racially-motivated murder, but the facts evetually come to light through Mark Darrow's perseverence and intelligence. Patterson's Spire is about this successful who comes back to his alma mater on the calling of his mentor to salvage the reputation of his old college. The college is in the midst of an embezzlement scam and whilst Mark Darrow sorts it out, he revisits a tragedy that took place here years ago concerning the death of a girl he knew and his close friend who is convicted of the murder and is languishing in jail for years. In the process of unravelling the mystery, Darrow revisits his past, his friends and how they had changed over the years. I approached this book as a whodunnit - which it is not. It is not so much about who murdered the girl years ago, why Darrow left the place or who is behind the scam that brings Darrow back. It is more of an exploration of relationships, about how circumstances change people for the better or worst. I wouldn't say this is his better novel for I have better far better ones than this one. But Patterson has a very compelling style which keeps you turning pages till you get to the end. Overall an average book, but a good story. Read it only if you are a diehard Patterson fan. This was a new author for me to read. Just not my genre of late, but I read it for a book group and that is why I enjoy a good book group, you read stuff you wouldn't normally pick up. The story line was written at a good pace and the intense stuff came at the end with a twist I didn't see coming! The characters were easy to follow and believable. I always love to read books based on historic colleges, and the small towns that encompasses them. no reviews | add a review
AwardsDistinctions
Fiction.
Thriller.
HTML: Both a razor-sharp thriller and a poignant love story, this twisting tale of psychological suspense is Patterson's most compelling novel in years Mark Darrow grew up in a small Ohio town with no real advantages beyond his intelligence and athletic ability. But thanks to the intervention of Lionel Farr—a professor at Caldwell, the local college—Darrow became an excellent student and, later, a superb trial lawyer. Now Farr asks his still-youthful protégé for a life-altering favor. An embezzlement scandal has threatened Caldwell's very existence—would Darrow consider becoming its new president? Darrow accepts, but returning to his alma mater opens old wounds. Sixteen years ago, on the night of his greatest triumph as Caldwell's star quarterback, he discovered the body of a black female student named Angela Hall at the base of the Spire, the bell tower that dominates the leafy campus. His best friend, Steve Tillman, was charged with Angela's murder and ultimately sent to prison for life. But now, even as Darrow begins the daunting task of leading Caldwell, he discovers that the case against his friend left crucial questions unanswered. Despite his new obligations—and his deepening attachment to Farr's beautiful though troubled daughter—Darrow begins his own inquiry into the murder. Soon he becomes convinced that Angela's killer is still at large, but only when another mysterious death occurs does he understand that his own life is at risk. .No library descriptions found. |
LibraryThing Early Reviewers AlumRichard North Patterson's book The Spire was available from LibraryThing Early Reviewers. Current DiscussionsNonePopular covers
Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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