Richard North Patterson, Exile

Richard North Patterson, Exile

User reviews
5

Value For Money

write a review

Richard North Patterson, Exile

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here's how it works.

Richard North Patterson, Exile
5 1 user review
5100%
40%
30%
20%
10%
5

Value For Money

User Reviews

Harriet Klausner
5

Value For Money

Exile Richard North Patterson Holt, Ja

Exile

Richard North Patterson

Holt, January 2007, $26.00

ISBN: 0805079475

With a shot at his making Congress, San Francisco attorney David Wolfe should say no; all his advisors and his fianc e Carole Shorr tell him that taking the case is political suicide. Still, David cannot refuse his former lover, Palestinian Hana Arif, when she asks him to defend her against conspiracy charges that she was a key player in the assassination of peace seeking Israeli Prime Minister Amos Ben-Aron. David thinks back to when they attended Harvard Law School together thirteen years ago; he the American-Jew and her the Palestinian shared a torrid love affair, though she was engaged to Palestinian activist Saeb Khalid.

Suicide bomber Ibrahim Jefar has given testimony that incriminates Hana in the bombing, making the case that much more difficult to gain an acquittal, and

the media has already hung her. Still, David diligently works on Hana's defense, in spite of his participation threatening his engagement, especially since her father is a firm Zionist, having survived the Holocaust and destroying his Congressional aspirations.

The cast is solid, as just about every potential position on the Israeli-Palestine conflict seems reasonably represented by full blooded intelligent individuals, even without events like the recent Gaza and Hezbollah wars mentioned. The trial is terrific, as the audience further obtains varying viewpoints. However, when David races to the Middle East to prove a different conspiracy theory than that of the prosecution, the storyline loses some of its lucidity and strength, as it turns into a cartoonish thriller. Still, this is a strong tale that focuses justly on one of the most complex crisis' still boiling, as if it is 1948 instead of the twenty first century.

1 - 1 of 1 items displayed
1

Q&A

There are no questions yet. Be the first to ask a question.