Readers of Linda Fairstein’s previous books are well aware of NY assistant DA Alexandra Cooper’s mixed relationship with her boss, Paul Battaglia. What started off as a close one with her regarding him as a mentor, had deteriorated as his ambition and ego increased. The situation definitely changes in the first page of DEADFALL when she is with his body in the autopsy room of the morgue. He was shot as he rushed up the stairs of the Metropolitan Museum of Art to speak to her. As he collapsed, he fell on her and they became entangled.
Because of Alex’s position in the department, Jaxon Stern, a new policeman from a different area, is put in charge of the investigation. Very quickly, Alex realizes that he considers her to be not only a witness but the prime suspect and treats her accordingly. Despite her many years experience, she reacts as many other people do when being questioned by the authorities. Soon, US attorney for the Southern District of New York, James Prescott, takes over the investigation.
There is motive. Alex is supposed to be off-duty while she recuperates from being kidnaped for five days. Battaglia had specifically ordered her to stay away from the investigation into the murder of Wolf Savage, a garment district designer, CEO, and father of one of her friends. The show she was attending at the museum was a fashion show.
Alex, her partner Mike Chapman, and their friend Mercer Wallace realize in order to clear her, they should try to find those responsible for the killing.
First, they decide they should find out why Battaglia was so anxious to speak to Alex that he rushed to the Museum to catch her there. They discover that even though he was honored as a wildlife protector, he also might have been a member of The Order of St. Hubertus, a group that indulges in sport killing of rare animals. One of their hunting spots is Cobolo Creek in Texas. That is where Justice Antonin Scalia died. Fairstein provides the details of his death that raised questions about whether it was natural or murder: The person who signed the death certificate did so over the telephone, never having actually seen the body. (Legal in Texas). There was no autopsy and his family had his body cremated immediately. She wrote that he was found with a pillow over his head. While many reports said that, a witness said it was not over his face but above the top of his head. Battaglia might have been there at the time.
Their investigation leads them into learning about the trafficking of animals, especially animal parts, such as ivory and rhinoceros horns. They learn that many of them are hidden among heroin and shipped by boat from Africa and Asia to other parts of the world.
Fairstein’s books always focus in on one location in New York City and provide a great deal of information about it. After reading her description of the Bronx Zoo, the largest in the US, where the animals run free in areas specific to their natural habitats but are limited by natural barriers (ravines, creeks, walls), I would like to visit it. One negative comment: She mentions Ernie, a silve Readers of Linda Fairstein’s previous books are well aware of NY assistant DA Alexandra Cooper’s mixed relationship with her boss, Paul Battaglia. What started off as a close one with her regarding him as a mentor, had deteriorated as his ambition and ego increased. The situation definitely changes in the first page of DEADFALL when she is with his body in the autopsy room of the morgue. He was shot as he rushed up the stairs of the Metropolitan Museum of Art to speak to her. As he collapsed, he fell on her and they became entangled.
Because of Alex’s position in the department, Jaxon Stern, a new policeman from a different area, is put in charge of the investigation. Very quickly, Alex realizes that he considers her to be not only a witness but the prime suspect and treats her accordingly. Despite her many years experience, she reacts as many other people do when being questioned by the authorities. Soon, US attorney for the Southern District of New York, James Prescott, takes over the investigation.
There is motive. Alex is supposed to be off-duty while she recuperates from being kidnaped for five days. Battaglia had specifically ordered her to stay away from the investigation into the murder of Wolf Savage, a garment district designer, CEO, and father of one of her friends. The show she was attending at the museum was a fashion show.
Alex, her partner Mike Chapman, and their friend Mercer Wallace realize in order to clear her, they should try to find those responsible for the killing.
First, they decide they should find out why Battaglia was so anxious to speak to Alex that he rushed to the Museum to catch her there. They discover that even though he was honored as a wildlife protector, he also might have been a member of The Order of St. Hubertus, a group that indulges in sport killing of rare animals. One of their hunting spots is Cobolo Creek in Texas. That is where Justice Antonin Scalia died. Fairstein provides the details of his death that raised questions about whether it was natural or murder: The person who signed the death certificate did so over the telephone, never having actually seen the body. (Legal in Texas). There was no autopsy and his family had his body cremated immediately. She wrote that he was found with a pillow over his head. While many reports said that, a witness said it was not over his face but above the top of his head. Battaglia might have been there at the time.
Their investigation leads them into learning about the trafficking of animals, especially animal parts, such as ivory and rhinoceros horns. They learn that many of them are hidden among heroin and shipped by boat from Africa and Asia to other parts of the world.
Fairstein’s books always focus in on one location in New York City and provide a great deal of information about it. After reading her description of the Bronx Zoo, the largest in the US, where the animals run free in areas specific to their natural habitats but are limited by natural barriers (ravines, creeks, walls), I would like to visit it. One negative comment: She mentions Ernie, a silver-backed gorilla whose parents were captured in the wild and brought to the Cleveland zoo as part of its animal conservancy program, she wrote “He survived Cleveland.” In actuality, Cleveland rocks! It’s a great place to visit. Lots to do and see and not as expensive to do so than in NYC.
The story is gripping and informative. Unfortunately, she refers back to her kidnaping and the murder of Wolf Savage, both important parts of previous books, far too often. While the DEADFALL can be read and understood without having read the previous books, the references are far too frequent. It was not necessary to keep reminding the reader that Alex was kidnaped or that she was told to stay away from the Savage murder investigation.
In addition, Fairchild shows a disrespect for her reader’s intelligence by using unnecessarily short chapters. A scene with the same characters in the same location during a constant time span and covering the same subject should be contained in one chapter, not two, three, or more. As usual, I drop my rating one star for that. r-backed gorilla whose parents were captured in the wild and brought to the Cleveland zoo as part of its animal conservancy program, she wrote “He survived Cleveland.” In actuality, Cleveland rocks! It’s a great place to visit. Lots to do and see and not as expensive to do so than in NYC.
The story is gripping and informative. Unfortunately, she refers back to her kidnaping and the murder of Wolf Savage, both important parts of previous books, far too often. While the DEADFALL can be read and understood without having read the previous books, the references are far too frequent. It was not necessary to keep reminding the reader that Alex was kidnaped or that she was told to stay away from the Savage murder investigation.
In addition, Fairchild shows a disrespect for her reader’s intelligence by using unnecessarily short chapters. A scene with the same characters in the same location during a constant time span and covering the same subject should be contained in one chapter, not two, three, or more. As usual, I drop my rating one star for that.