Reviews!

I am still having a difficult time concentrating on reading a book, I hope to get back into it at some point. Still doing book promotions just not reviews Thank you for your understanding during this difficult time. I appreciate all of you. Kathleen Kelly July 2024

07 February 2012

Gods and Fathers by James LePore Review For Partners in Crime Tours





TITLE:  Gods and Fathers
AUTHOR:  James LePore
PUBLISHED BY:  The Story Plant
ISBN: ISBN-10: 1611880297 ISBN-13: 978-1611880298
GENRE:  Suspense
SYNOPSIS:  Nationally bestselling author James LePore has established a reputation as a writer whose vividly drawn characters and morally complex plots have kept readers up to all hours turning pages. His new novel promises more sleepless nights and more nonstop thrills.

Matt DeMarco is an accomplished Manhattan attorney with more than his share of emotional baggage. His marriage ended disastrously, his ex-wife has pulled their son away from him, and her remarriage to a hugely successful Arab businessman has created complications for Matt on multiple levels. However, his life shifts from troubled to imperiled when two cops – men he's known for a long time – come into his home and arrest his son as the prime suspect in the murder of the boy's girlfriend.

Suddenly, the enmity between Matt and his only child is no longer relevant. Matt must do everything he can to clear his son, who he fully believes is innocent. Doing so will require him to quit his job and make enemies of former friends – and it will throw him up against forces he barely knew existed and can only begin to comprehend how to battle.

GODS AND FATHERS is at once a powerful mystery and a provocative international thriller, all of it presented with LePore's signature fascinating characters placed in dire circumstances where every choice poses new and potentially fatal challenges.
AUTHOR BIO: James LePore is an attorney who has practiced law for more than two decades, and an accomplished photographer. He is the author of three previous novels, A WORLD I NEVER MADE, BLOOD OF MY BROTHER, and SONS AND PRINCES, as well as the story collection, ANYONE CAN DIE. He lives in Westchester County, NY with his wife, artist Karen Chandler.
AUTHOR SITES:  website: www.jamesleporefiction.com
ADDED INFO:  Published date  02/07/12
                            300 pages
EXCERPT:
 “Why can’t you stay at your mother’s when they’re away?”
“I told you, Basil’s worried about security.”
Though this statement was challengeable on several levels, Matt let it pass. The marriage six years ago of Debra DeMarco, nee Rusillo, and Basil al-Hassan, a rich and handsome Syrian businessman, had marked the beginning of the end of Matt’s long and tortured fight for a place in his son’s heart. Armed with the ultimate weapon—-her new husband’s money—-Debra had made quick work of destroying the last vestiges of Matt’s hopes. A penthouse on Park Avenue, a beach house in Easthampton, a flat in Paris, a “cottage” in Bermuda, clothes and cars virtually on demand, Matt had no way of competing with all this, and no way of expressing his anger—-until tonight.
“What about Mina?” Matt asked.
“What about her?”
“Why aren’t you seeing her?”
“She’s studying.”
“Studying?”
“Yes, studying. You keep repeating what I say. She’s a student. Students study.”
This statement was delivered dismissively, not sarcastically. You’re stupid, Dad. I’m tired of you. Why am I bothering with you? are what Matt heard, and it occurred to him, with a clarity that shocked him after all these muddled and painful years of effort and rejection, effort and rejection, ad nauseum, that he could not hurt Michael, that his own son was indifferent to him, and this was a blow, and strangely a release.
“Well, your friends are assholes, and you are too, Michael. You’re an arrogant, shallow asshole. Where you came from, I don’t know. But not from me.”
“That could be. Maybe Mom had an affair–like you did--and I’m not your son. Do I care? No, I don’t. Can I go upstairs now? I’ll leave in the morning.”
In the kitchen, Matt poured himself another scotch. He took the pizza out of the refrigerator and sat down to eat it, surprised to find that he actually had an appetite. Until tonight, despite the bad cards he had drawn, he had never stopped trying to break through to his son. It’s over, he said to himself, over and done. He’s not your son. He’s Debra’s son, Basil’s son. You lost him a long time ago.
He finished the pizza and was wrapping the garbage to take out in the morning when the doorbell rang. Looking out the kitchen window he saw that it was snowing heavily. Those idiots, he thought, they’re probably stuck someplace. No choice but to let them in. But when he swung open the front door, it wasn’t Adnan and Ali, but his friends Jack McCann and Clarke Goode, homicide detectives who he had worked with for many years, standing facing him. He could see their unmarked car at the curb, and behind it, blocking his driveway, a Pound Ridge patrol car, its engine running and headlights on, two uniformed officers in the front seat. McCann, a florid Irishman whose blue eyes were usually lit by some inner secret joke, looked grim; and Goode, a gnarled black man who never failed to greet Matt with a big smile, was not smiling. Far from it.
“Come in. What’s up?” Matt said. Then, nodding toward the street where the patrol car sat: “What’s with the uniforms?”
The two detectives stepped into the foyer.
“Take your coats off,” Matt said. He could see they were dressed for work, sport jackets and ties on under their trench coats.
“Matt...,” McCann said.
“Talk, Jack,” Matt said. “Is somebody dead?”
“Is Michael home?” Goode asked. He had not taken off his coat, and neither had McCann.
“That’s his car out there,” Matt said. “You know that.”
“Where is he?”
“He’s upstairs.”
Matt looked from McCann to Goode, then back to McCann; looked in the eyes of each, and did not like what he saw. “What about Michael?” he asked.
“We’re here to arrest him,” McCann replied.
“For what?” Drugs, Matt thought, good, let the kid get a taste of the pain he’s always inflicting on others. Him and his two Arab suppliers.
“For murder, Matt,” Goode said.

My Thoughts:
God and Fathers by James LePore is a superb murder mystery/thriller that gets you right on the first page. Matt works in the Manhattan District Attorneys office and he is doing his first summation in his first murder trial.  He has been divorced from his wife for over 20 years and his son, Michael, barely speaks to him. Upon returning home on this particular day, he finds that Michael has arrived home from college and has a couple of men he has never seen with him. Matt finds this a bit suspicious but is not too worried until the police arrive on his doorstep to arrest Michael for the murder of his girlfriend Jasmine.
From here on the story takes you on a roller coaster ride while Matt tries to prove his sons innocence. This is not just a murder case but has a terrorist element to it. An international story that could have been taken from today's headlines. I loved how Mr. LePore was able to put all the parts of this story together so seamlessly that it was almost like watching a movie. This story is edge of your seat suspenseful and I highly recommend it. Among James LePore's novels are A World I Never Made , Blood of My Brother and Sons and Princes.



DISCLAIMER
I participated in the virtual tour with Partners in Crime and received a copy of this book for review and was not monetarily compensated for my review.


Visit the blogs listed below for their reviews on Gods and Fathers.



Donna Brown @ Book Bags and Cat Naps
Mary Reiss @ Sweeping Me
Eileen Burmester @ Books R Us
Krystal Larson @ Live To Read ~Krystal
Kathleen Anderson @ Jersey Girl Book Reviews
Molly Edwards @ Reviews By Molly
Inga Kupp-Silberg @ Me and Reading
Misty Rayburn @ The Top Shelf
Linda Smith @ Books For Me
Rick Rhodes @ Rhodes Reviews
Jodi Webb @ Words by Webb
Kathleen Kelly @ CelticLady's Reviews
Paula Phillips @ The Phantom Paragrapher
Dorothy Torres @ Alaskan Bookie
Crystal Fulcher @ My Reading Room
Gautami Tripathy @ Everything Distils Into Reading

3 comments:

  1. Fantastic review and post!! I totally agree with you. It was a wild ride of suspense.

    ReplyDelete
  2. AWESOME review, Kathleen! Glad you were on the tour too!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I enjoy a good mystery. I may just have to give this one a try. Thank you for your thoughts.
    -FABR Steph@FiveAlarmBookReviews

    ReplyDelete

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