Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 23
Intriguing as always August 8, 2010 RozziD (Lincoln, England) This is the 9th in the Women's Murder Club series and follows three cases, all which fall onto Detective Lindsay Boxer's desk. A string of cat-burglaries - all resulting in high value jewellery being stolen by the burglar nicknamed by the press, or more specifically Cindy - Lindsay's Crime Desk journalist friend, "Hello Kitty", a high profile, celebrity murder at the home of one of the burglaries and a spate of seemingly senseless murders of mothers and babies. What links all these crimes? If you have read the other books in the series, you know they must be linked!!
This book is as captivating as the others and seemlessly links the police work of Lindsay and her fellow Women's Murder Club members and Lindsays chaotic and slightly unauthodox love life with ex Homeland Security deputy director fiancee, Joe.
This is definitely one not to be missed if you have enjoyed the other books in the series.
9th Judgement July 10, 2010 Film Viewer This book was purchased as a birthday gift for someone who is a fan of James Patterson and I gather he thoroughly enjoyed it. Many thanks.
9th Judgement - James Patterson June 17, 2010 Ms. F. Greves (Argyll, Scotland) What a fantastic book. Gets you gripped from page 1. Just as good if not better than the other 8 books on the Womens Murder Club. Lindsay Boxer is back and fighting against a murderer killing women and children. Spine tingling, plenty of twists and unputdownable. A definite must read. In fact all the books are a must read.
9th Judgement (Womens Murder Club 9)
8th Confession (Womens Murder Club 8)
7th Heaven (Womens Murder Club 7)
The 6th Target (Womens Murder Club 6)The 5th Horseman: The Women's Murder Club 5
4th of July (Womens Murder Club 4)
3rd Degree
2nd Chance
1st to Die
Very Disappointing June 5, 2010 A. Agarwal (London, UK) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
I have enjoyed the series. But this felt as if it was written because he was forced to write it. There was very little or no tension.
9th judgement, 10 out of 10 (divided by 2) June 4, 2010 Dr. M von Vogelhausen (UK) 4 out of 6 found this review helpful
Picture the scene. A tin bath, with a makeshift sail made of crepe paper; a rolling, dark red sea; a man frantically bailing water out of the bath with a book. That was me, and that was a different book entirely, a mathematical romance based in the land of celery. I survived that ordeal thanks only to luck and a really good lipsalve.
However, when I had recovered, late in the Precambrian era, it occurred to me to read this book. I retrieved it from the well in which I had suspended it in order to maintain its stability, closed any open doors, and opened any that were closed - I am a creature of habit (rather like my second cousin, who nevertheless was expelled from the zooconvent).
And as the pages flew by like flying rectangles of paper attached to the spine of a book, a shrouded figure came and sat by me atop my platform. It was Fiction herself; she beguiled me through the words of Patterson, and the characters rose through the water of his plot like bubbles of personality helium. Although this meant that I was concerned by the squeakiness of my voices, the resolution of the novel left me sated and less sad than I usually am when I finish the ninth installment of a series. So - good.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 23
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