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Reversible Errors by Scott Turow (2002, Hardcover)

US $2.99
ApproximatelyAU $4.65
Condition:
Very good
Postage:
US $5.22 (approx. AU $8.12) USPS Media MailTM.
Located in: Waxahachie, Texas, United States
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Estimated between Wed, 6 Aug and Tue, 12 Aug to 94104
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eBay item number:175938229665

Item specifics

Condition
Very good: A book that does not look new and has been read but is in excellent condition. No obvious ...
ISBN
9780374281601

About this product

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Farrar, Straus & Giroux
ISBN-10
0374281602
ISBN-13
9780374281601
eBay Product ID (ePID)
109337013

Product Key Features

Book Title
Reversible Errors
Number of Pages
448 Pages
Language
English
Topic
Thrillers / Legal, Legal
Publication Year
2002
Genre
Fiction
Author
Scott Turow
Format
Hardcover

Dimensions

Item Height
1.4 in
Item Weight
26.3 Oz
Item Length
10.3 in
Item Width
5.8 in

Additional Product Features

Intended Audience
Trade
LCCN
2002-070891
Reviews
"No one on the contemporary scene writes better myster-suspense novels than Scott Turow." --Bill Blum,Los Angeles Times Book Review "When Scott Turow writes about a milieu, he knows whereof he speaks. You know he made it up, but you also know it's real." --George V. Higgins,Chicago Tribune "Turow brings a literary sensibility to a grit-and-gravel genre: if he calls to mind any comparison, it's to John le Carre. His novels are shaped by [a] studied bleakness, an introspect's embrace of the gray-zone ambiguities of modern life." --Gail Caldwell,The Boston Sunday Globe "Turow istheclass act of legal thriller writers." --Publishers Weekly "Turow moves skillfully between past and present, revealing tiny tidbits of fact, circumstance, and motive as he goes and leaving it up to the reader not only to construct the story's linear progression but to understand the significance of the book's title as both a legal entity within its plot and a personal reality for its characters." --Library Journal, "No one on the contemporary scene writes better myster-suspense novels than Scott Turow." --Bill Blum, Los Angeles Times Book Review "When Scott Turow writes about a milieu, he knows whereof he speaks. You know he made it up, but you also know it's real." --George V. Higgins, Chicago Tribune "Turow brings a literary sensibility to a grit-and-gravel genre: if he calls to mind any comparison, it's to John le Carre. His novels are shaped by [a] studied bleakness, an introspect's embrace of the gray-zone ambiguities of modern life." --Gail Caldwell, The Boston Sunday Globe "Turow is the class act of legal thriller writers." --Publishers Weekly "Turow moves skillfully between past and present, revealing tiny tidbits of fact, circumstance, and motive as he goes and leaving it up to the reader not only to construct the story's linear progression but to understand the significance of the book's title as both a legal entity within its plot and a personal reality for its characters." --Library Journal, Turow moves skillfully between past and present, revealing tiny tidbits of fact, circumstance, and motive as he goes and leaving it up to the reader not only to construct the story's linear progression but to understand the significance of the book's title as both a legal entity within its plot and a personal reality for its characters., Turow brings a literary sensibility to a grit-and-gravel genre: if he calls to mind any comparison, it's to John le Carre. His novels are shaped by [a] studied bleakness, an introspect's embrace of the gray-zone ambiguities of modern life., "No one on the contemporary scene writes better myster-suspense novels than Scott Turow." -- Bill Blum, Los Angeles Times Book Review "When Scott Turow writes about a milieu, he knows whereof he speaks. You know he made it up, but you also know it's real." -- George V. Higgins, Chicago Tribune "Turow brings a literary sensibility to a grit-and-gravel genre: if he calls to mind any comparison, it's to John le Carre. His novels are shaped by [a] studied bleakness, an introspect's embrace of the gray-zone ambiguities of modern life." -- Gail Caldwell, The Boston Sunday Globe "Turow is the class act of legal thriller writers." -- Publishers Weekly "Turow moves skillfully between past and present, revealing tiny tidbits of fact, circumstance, and motive as he goes and leaving it up to the reader not only to construct the story's linear progression but to understand the significance of the book's title as both a legal entity within its plot and a personal reality for its characters." -- Library Journal, "No one on the contemporary scene writes better myster-suspense novels than Scott Turow." --Bill Blum, Los Angeles Times Book Review "When Scott Turow writes about a milieu, he knows whereof he speaks. You know he made it up, but you also know it's real." --George V. Higgins, Chicago Tribune "Turow brings a literary sensibility to a grit-and-gravel genre: if he calls to mind any comparison, it's to John le Carre. His novels are shaped by [a] studied bleakness, an introspect's embrace of the gray-zone ambiguities of modern life." --Gail Caldwell, The Boston Sunday Globe "Turow is the class act of legal thriller writers." -- Publishers Weekly "Turow moves skillfully between past and present, revealing tiny tidbits of fact, circumstance, and motive as he goes and leaving it up to the reader not only to construct the story's linear progression but to understand the significance of the book's title as both a legal entity within its plot and a personal reality for its characters." --Library Journal, When Scott Turow writes about a milieu, he knows whereof he speaks. You know he made it up, but you also know it's real.
Dewey Edition
21
Dewey Decimal
813/.54
Synopsis
A super-charged, exquisitely suspenseful novel about a vicious triple murder and the man condemned to die for it Rommy "Squirrel" Gandolph is a Yellow Man, an inmate on death row for a 1991 triple murder in Kindle County. His slow progress toward certain execution is nearing completion when Arthur Raven, a corporate lawyer who is Rommy's reluctant court-appointed representative, receives word that another inmate may have new evidence that will exonerate Gandolph. Arthur's opponent in the case is Muriel Wynn, Kindle County's formidable chief deputy prosecuting attorney, who is considering a run for her boss's job. Muriel and Larry Starczek, the original detective on the case, don't want to see Rommy escape a fate they long ago determined he deserved, for a host of reasons. Further complicating the situation is the fact that Gillian Sullivan, the judge who originally found Rommy guilty, is only recently out of prison herself, having served time for taking bribes. Scott Turow's compelling, multi-dimensional characters take the reader into Kindle County's parallel yet intersecting worlds of police and small-time crooks, airline executives and sophisticated scammers--and lawyers of all stripes. No other writer offers such a convincing true-to-life picture of how the law and life interact, or such a profound understanding of what is at stake--personally, professionally, and morally--when the state holds the power to end a man's life.
LC Classification Number
PS3570.U754R48 2002

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katherincoo-6

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