Wednesday, August 1, 2012

JUDGMENT CALL by J. A. Jance Audio Edition





Award winning audiobook narrator/voice over artist Hillary Huber has over 75 titles to her credit.  The winner of Audies and Earphones Awards she has been quoted as saying, “"I love my job, I can't believe I get to do this from my very own studio. I love to ingest someone else's words and put them back in the world."

    And put those words back into the world she does with gusto.  Her reading is assured as she becomes the voice of Cochise County Sheriff Joanna Brady.  Her intonations perfectly capture Brady’s fear, exasperation and determination as she places her life on the line to catch a heartless killer.

    Jance’s 15th Brady novel is another winner with the protagonist as fascinating as ever and descriptions Of Bisbee, Arizona as real as a wide-screen video.  And, as is her wont, deft author Jance keeps us guessing until the last page.  Villains seems to become more vicious with each Brady adventure, and the latest tops them all.  He’s completely merciless and cares nothing for the innocent lives he takes as he pursues those he feels have wronged him.

    Jenny, Brady’s 15-year-old daughter,  comes across a dead body while out on an early morning horseback ride.   Her high school principal, Debra Highsmith, has been savaged.  But, why?  True, Highsmith was not the most popular high school faculty member, but murder?  To complicate Brady’s investigation Highsmith was an extremely private person, almost obsessively so and appears to have no next of kin.

    While Brady spends 24/24 trying to discover anything about the mysterious Highsmith another murder occurs.  Outside of the immediacy of this slaying could there be any connection between the two?  Even more perplexing is that what Brady considers police information has been appearing on the internet.

    Brady is wife, mother, sheriff, which at times seems more than she can do especially as she makes discoveries about her own family’s past and the death of her father.   Jance peoples her story with carefully drawn characters, especially a nosy older newspaper woman, Marliss Shackleford, and an arrogant medical examiner.

    You can’t miss a sentence or you may have trouble keeping up with who’s who in relation to the others,  but it’s well worth the trip!

    -Gail Cooke

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