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In Linda Fairstein’s outstanding new novel, the New York Public Library houses dazzling treasures—and deadly secrets.
When Assistant District Attorney Alex Cooper is summoned to Tina Barr’s apartment on Manhattan’s Upper East Side, she finds a neighbor convinced that the young woman was assaulted. But the terrified victim, a conservator of rare books and maps, refuses to cooperate with investigators. Then another woman is found murdered in that same apartment with an extremely valuable book, believed to have been stolen. As Alex pursues the murderer, she is drawn into the strange and privileged world of the Hunt family, major benefactors of the New York Public Library and passionate rare book collectors.
Eventually Alex connects their internal family rivalries to a priceless edition of Alice in Wonderland, which also contains the world’s oldest map. Would one of the well-bred Hunts be willing to kill for the treasures? The search for the answer takes Alex and her team on a breathtaking chase from Manhattan’s grandest apartments to the secret tunnels and chambers of the New York Public Library, and finally to a nineteenth-century underground vault. There, in the pitch-black darkness, Alex comes face-to-face with the killer who values money more than life.
Featuring a cast of elite, erudite, and downright eccentric characters, and a complex trail of clues that will have you guessing until the final pages, Lethal Legacy is Linda Fairstein’s most beguiling thriller yet.
What makes Lethal Legacy one of Linda Fairstein's stronger offerings is the intriguing setting: the catacombs beneath the New York Public Library. It also helps that the author downplays the unrealistic girlie-girl aspects of Cooper's life…in favor of a heightened focus on the mystery and its mix of high society, rare maps, library crimes and literary restoration. Fairstein presents the latter, interestingly and in great detail, as just another form of forensic science.
More Reviews and RecommendationsHailed by Patricia Cornwell as "one of the most promising forces in crime fiction," former head of the Manhattan District Attorney's Sex Crimes Unit Linda Fairstein has hooked readers with her intense mystery series featuring assistant D.A. -- and Fairstein's alter ego -- Alex Cooper.
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November 13, 2009: I love old maps and old books so this was one of the more interesting recent Fairsteins. My mother and I both enjoyed this book.
I Also Recommend: The Bookman's Promise (Cliff Janeway Series #3).
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August 24, 2009: This is a typical Linda Fairstein book about Alex Cooper and her team solving yet another murder in Manhattan.
Name:
Linda Fairstein
Current Home:
New York, New York and Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts
Date of Birth:
May 05, 1947
Place of Birth:
Mount Vernon, New York
Education:
B.A., Vassar College, 1969; J.D., University of Virginia School of Law, 1972
Awards:
Named "Woman of the Year" by New Woman and Glamour magazines, 1993; Nero Award for The Deadhouse, 2001
Linda Fairstein is passionate about putting sex offenders behind bars and had done just that many times, both in real life -- as one of New York City's premier sex crimes prosecutors -- and in her fiction, with her popular series of Alex Cooper mysteries.
Born and raised in Mount Vernon, New York, Fairstein attended Vassar College, where she majored in English literature. She went on to receive a law degree from the prestigious University of Virginia School of Law in 1972. In November of that year, Fairstein was assigned to the staff of the New York County District Attorney's office and was soon heading up the Sex Crimes Prosecution Unit, where she developed a reputation as one of the toughest prosecutors in the office's history. Fairstein spent the next two decades dedicating herself to nailing the worst of the city's sexual offenders, working on such high-profile cases as the Preppy Murder and the Central Park Jogger.
In 1993, Fairstein was named "Woman of the Year" by New Woman and Glamour magazines. A year later, her groundbreaking nonfiction book, Sexual Violence: Our War Against Rape, was named a Notable Book by The New York Times.
Fairstein's first foray into fiction writing was 1994's Final Jeopardy, which introduced the tough, savvy assistant D.A. Alexandra "Alex" Cooper -- a character close to the author's own identity -- who was well received by fans and critics. As Publishers Weekly noted, Alex's "greatest appeal lies in the warmth of her friendships, the humanness of her mistakes and her unswerving devotion to protecting the next female from harm."
Since then, Fairstein has continued to chronicle Alex Cooper's crime-solving adventures in a string of bestsellers that draws on the author's thoroughgoing knowledge of the legal system and longtime affection for the Big Apple. A believer in public service, Fairstein sits on the board of directors of several nonprofit groups, among them the National Center for Victims of Crime, Phoenix House Foundation, and New York Women's Agenda, and has also served on President Clinton's Violence Against Women Advisory Council, New York Women's Agenda Domestic Violence Committee, the American College of Trial Lawyers, The Women's Forum, Mystery Writers of America, and Sisters in Crime.
In an interview on her publisher's web site, Fairstein explains that her career and her life's mission are one in the same: "I think so much more is possible in terms of what we are able to give women who have been victims of violence and how they can triumph in a courtroom," Fairstein reflects. "So to take this -- the professional life I've had over the last 30 years and to mix it with the great pleasure of writing -- is something I never dreamed I'd actually be able to accomplish."
Fairstein is married to Justin Feldman, a lawyer who helped run Robert F. Kennedy's 1964 United States Senate campaign.
Fairstein has admitted to having her eye on the post of United States Attorney General, and in fact interviewed for that position in 1993.
Cold Hit made President Clinton's highly-publicized vacation reading list in 1999.
What was the book that most influenced your life or your career as a writer?
When I was thirteen years old, I read Margaret Mitchell's Gone with the Wind, and that fascinating saga of Scarlett O'Hara against the background of the Civil War kept me spellbound because of the storytelling. I loved the rich texture of the plot, the vivid scenes depicted, and the fact that it was so long and dense in its unraveling. I had written short stories long before that, but it was reading that novel -- the only one ever written by Mitchell -- which made me think I would love to try to tell stories that would engage a reader in the way Mitchell caught my imagination.
What are your favorite books, and what makes them special to you?
What are some of your favorite films, and what makes them unforgettable to you?
My most favorite film is Hitchcock's Notorious, starring Ingrid Bergman and Cary Grant. First of all, it's Hitchcock -- so the story is a wonderfully devious mix of foreign intrigue and mystery. The actors are fantastic, the story is taut and riveting, down to the very last scene, and it's got a wonderful romance in the middle of all spy-jinks.
Rebecca is one of the few novels to which I've ever been attached that was made, in my opinion, into a fabulous movie. I love a lot of murder mysteries from the ‘40s and ‘50s --their atmosphere, their noir quality, the style of the acting -- so Dial "M" for Murder, The Maltese Falcon, Double Indemnity -- classics that hold up time after time.
I adore good comedy -- just about anything Woody Allen has done, and especially movies like Manhattan and Annie Hall, which are both brilliant.
I could watch Gone With the Wind every few months and still need a box of tissues by my side, and swoon again over Clark Gable.
Give me a classic movie channel and a bowl of popcorn -- if I can't be reading a good book -- and I'm happy for days on end.
What types of music do you like? Is there any particular kind you like to listen to when you're writing?
I guess I give away my age -- and my college days in the 1960s -- to say that my favorite kind of music -- in the house, in my car, on the new iPod -- is Motown. I love the great girl groups and the Temptations, and would go anywhere to see and hear Bette Midler, but my all time favorite is Smokey Robinson. Next come the Stones and the Beatles, and maybe a few of the great songs of The Band. For calmer times, I listen to a lot of James Taylor and Carly Simon -- both also staples of Martha's Vineyard, so it's a wonderful connection through the music. I also like Dr. John a lot.
When I'm writing, I can't listen to anything at all that has lyrics -- it's a total distraction and I find myself singing along in the background (not a voice any of you would want to hear). So one of my other long-time passions is ballet, which I studied for several decades and attend frequently. I have CDs of the scores of all my favorite ballets, and find the music both soothing and inspirational when I sit down to write.
What are your favorite kinds of books to give -- and get -- as gifts?
Books are always are my list of gifts to give to loved ones, and to receive. In giving, I try to match the interests of my friends or family to new books. I just sent my stepdaughter the new biography of Margot Fonteyn, because we both share a passion for the ballet. One of the really perks of being a writer is that I spend an inordinate amount of time in bookstores -- on line and real time -- and in libraries, so I try to stay on top of everything new and upcoming. It's great fun to introduce friends to crime writers they may not have read -- Harlan Coben or Michael Connelly, Denise Hamilton and Laura Lippman -- it's an interesting and exciting community of authors.
There are very few ways to go wrong with giving me a book as a gift. I love mystery and crime (although you'll have a hard time finding something I haven't already bought myself, pre-ordering on B&N when I know the publication date is near), classics (I majored in English literature in college and hope to read all of Trollope someday), or any interesting biography or historical nonfiction. Books make the best gifts in the world.
Do you have any special writing rituals? For example, what do you have on your desk when you're writing?
I like to start my writing in the morning, with my second cup of coffee, and write for as many hours a day as I can. My favorite place to write is on Martha's Vineyard, where I have a wonderful little cottage away from the house that's like my sanctuary. All my reference works and research, just my writing music, a wonderful view of water and wildflowers -- and always something related to the book I'm writing on my desk. When I wrote Entombed, my inspiration was a several-hundred year old brick taken from the actual house in which Edgar Allan Poe lived in lower Manhattan when the place was demolished a few years back.
Many writers are hardly "overnight success" stories. How long did it take for you to get where you are today? Any rejection-slip horror stories or inspirational anecdotes?
I took an unusual path to get to the place I am today. Writing was my first love, from adolescence on. I also had an interest in public service, and decided on a career in the law, putting off my dream to write fiction. Quite accidentally, my career as a young prosecutor took some dramatic directions when my field of specialty -- sexual assault and domestic violence -- became much more "high profile" than they were when I began my career in the law.
What was unusual about my first book -- the nonfiction Sexual Violence -- is that the publishers came to me and asked me to write it. So I never had to deal with rejection slips or the difficulty of being published. Because that book was well-received and reviewed, I had the courage to set about trying what I had always wanted to do, which was write crime novels. So my advice is both to write what you know -- an old adage but one which carries a lot of weight -- and the other is never to give up your dreams. It may take years, but it's quite wonderful when you can make them come true.
What tips or advice do you have for writers still looking to be discovered?
Write. Don't ever stop writing. You've got to do it every day, and if you don't like the process of writing, don't hope to be discovered. And read. It's so important to be "in" books all the time -- seeing how other writers use words and ideas. There's nothing better for developing your craft than writing and reading.
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In the summer of 2004, we asked authors featured in Meet the Writers to give us a list of their all-time favorite summer reads, and tell us what makes them just right for the season. Here's what Linda Fairstein had to say:
Here was the chance to get lost in a great story -- everything from the historical background of the Civil War and Reconstruction, to the race and class structures of the old South, to the turbulent relationship between Scarlett and Rhett. This is the kind of book that made me long to be a writer -- a complete spellbinder with something for everyone, and classic old-fashioned storytelling.
Now, I have to admit that if I were packing my bags for a week in the guesthouse at a friend's summer beach cottage, the luggage would be weighed down by the latest crime novels. I love classics and historical biography and literary fiction, but nothing helps me escape like a fast-paced, intricately plotted thriller or procedural. So this summer, between laps in the pool, give me the latest by Harlan Coben, Robert Crais, Lisa Scottoline, Richard North Patterson, P. D. James, Patricia Cornwell... they just can't write them fast enough for me.
In Linda Fairstein’s outstanding new novel, the New York Public Library houses dazzling treasures—and deadly secrets.
When Assistant District Attorney Alex Cooper is summoned to Tina Barr’s apartment on Manhattan’s Upper East Side, she finds a neighbor convinced that the young woman was assaulted. But the terrified victim, a conservator of rare books and maps, refuses to cooperate with investigators. Then another woman is found murdered in that same apartment with an extremely valuable book, believed to have been stolen. As Alex pursues the murderer, she is drawn into the strange and privileged world of the Hunt family, major benefactors of the New York Public Library and passionate rare book collectors.
Eventually Alex connects their internal family rivalries to a priceless edition of Alice in Wonderland, which also contains the world’s oldest map. Would one of the well-bred Hunts be willing to kill for the treasures? The search for the answer takes Alex and her team on a breathtaking chase from Manhattan’s grandest apartments to the secret tunnels and chambers of the New York Public Library, and finally to a nineteenth-century underground vault. There, in the pitch-black darkness, Alex comes face-to-face with the killer who values money more than life.
Featuring a cast of elite, erudite, and downright eccentric characters, and a complex trail of clues that will have you guessing until the final pages, Lethal Legacy is Linda Fairstein’s most beguiling thriller yet.
What makes Lethal Legacy one of Linda Fairstein's stronger offerings is the intriguing setting: the catacombs beneath the New York Public Library. It also helps that the author downplays the unrealistic girlie-girl aspects of Cooper's life…in favor of a heightened focus on the mystery and its mix of high society, rare maps, library crimes and literary restoration. Fairstein presents the latter, interestingly and in great detail, as just another form of forensic science.
At the start of bestseller Fairstein's entertaining 11th legal thriller to feature ADA Alexandra Cooper of Manhattan's Sex Crimes Prosecution Unit (after Killer Heat), Alex persuades librarian Tina Barr to go to the hospital after a burglar posing as a fireman assaults Tina at her East Side home. After Tina disappears, a woman's corpse turns up in Tina's abandoned apartment that looks like Tina's landlady, heiress Minerva Hunt, but in fact is Minerva's Romanian housekeeper. Alex and her sidekick, NYPD detective Mike Chapman, later learn that Tina was once employed by Minerva's father, Jasper Hunt, a rare book and map collector. The investigation leads Alex and her team into the dark depths of the New York Public Library in search of stolen items that certain bibliophiles and antique map enthusiasts would kill for. Full of fun information about the NYPL, the plot builds to a cool resolution that sets up Alex's next adventure involving a disturbing cold case. Author tour. (Jan.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Could the pursuit of a rare book or map be motivation to lie, steal, or commit murder? Assistant DA Alexandra Cooper and colleagues Mike Chapman and Mercer Wallace are drawn to the scene of a home invasion and possible assault of a young library conservator named Tina Barr. Barr is refusing to leave the confines of her Manhattan apartment, and fear prevents her from divulging details to help snare her assailant. The disappearance of Barr and two subsequent murders propel Cooper and cohorts into a world of socialites, rare map and book collectors, librarians, and thieves. Their investigation leads them to the New York Public Library, where they discover the magnificence and secrets that lie within this historic landmark. As they travel through hidden passages, marvel at rare antiquities, and uncover decades-old secrets, their adventures are reminiscent of the quests of Indiana Jones or National Treasure. Bibliophiles and Fairstein fans are in for a treat with this compelling 11th Alex Cooper novel (after Killer Heat). Recommended for all public libraries. [See Prepub Alert, LJ7/08.]
Loading...1. What makes this an ideal case for Alex, Mike, and Mercer? How do their special skills help them to navigate the world of the Hunts? What makes the Hunt family different from any other suspects they have encountered?
2. How did you interpret Tina Barr’s cryptic description of her work? If you were in her position, would you have gone to the police after the first attack?
3. How did your impressions of Minerva Hunt change throughout the novel? Did you trust Karla? What was your theory about why she was found with the jewel-encrusted copy of the Bay Psalm Book?
4. Discuss the different motivations of the collectors portrayed in Lethal Legacy, from Jonah Krauss to Alger Herrick. What makes them covet particular objects?
5. Why is it important to preserve early volumes such as the Bay Psalm Book? In a digital age, why do printed books matter? What did you learn about the history of book printing and mapmaking by reading Lethal Legacy?
6. Though Lethal Legacy is entirely a work of fiction, in 2006 a real-life map thief admitted to stealing dozens of valuable specimens, targeting institutions ranging from the New York Public Library to Yale’s Beinecke Library. In your opinion, what (and who) drives the high market value of centuries-old maps? What value, besides a financial one, do these artifacts have in Lethal Legacy?
7. Most of Linda Fairstein’s fans know that she worked in the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office for more than twenty years. But not many fans know that she collects rare books. How does it affect your reading to know that Fairstein is a rare-book lover herself?
8. What was thelegacy of the Jasper Hunts, in emotional terms? Was Jasper Hunt Junior mad or brilliant? Or both? Is he solely responsible for the feuds between the Hunt siblings?
9. Does Jane Eliot appreciate rare books in a way that is different from the other characters? How was her childhood enhanced by life in the New York Public Library?
10. Jonah Krauss describes how his life changed after he bought an early edition of The Great Gatsby. If you could pay any price, which rare book would you most want to own?
11. In chapter five, Alex fights for access to California’s DNA database, trying to clinch her case against Jamal Griggs. DNA evidence also affects the Hunt family tree. Should America adopt Britain’s Police and Justice Act, which allows police to collect and retain DNA from anyone who is arrested?
12. Alex has a harrowing cab ride on her way to meet Luc for dinner. How does that evening capture the two sides of her life: the gritty, constant threat of retaliation and an evening with a man who loves to surround her with luxury? What makes Luc the perfect antidote to her stressful job?
13. How did Travis Forbes become powerful? How is his power different from the Hunt family’s?
14. Discuss the New York Public Library’s role as a character in the novel. What did you discover about its unique history? What has helped this landmark endure into the twenty-first century?
15. Alex has encountered many criminal minds since her debut in Final Jeopardy. Do all perps, including the ones in Lethal Legacy, share a common weakness?
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