Mystery review: 'Hell Gate' by Linda Fairstein --
By Oline H. Cogdill --
March 21, 2010 --
Hell Gate. Linda Fairstein. Dutton. $26.95. 416 pp.
In each of Linda Fairstein's legal thrillers, the author gracefully melds New York City's hidden spots and history into a contemporary novel, showing how little has changed in crime and the ways people treat each other.
This theme is well-served in Fairstein's 12th novel featuring New York City Assistant District Attorney Alex Cooper, who specializes in sex crimes. A top-notch plot and realistic situations make "Hell Gate" a first-class tale of New York and the people who built it and now control it.
Politics, sexual trafficking – age-old issues that never go away -- and New York's historical, tax-supported mansions provide a sturdy foundation for "Hell Gate."
Cooper is called to the scene of a rusted freighter that has run aground on a sandbar near Rockaway Beach. The captain has abandoned his vessel, which is loaded with human cargo from Ukraine, including many young women being forced into sexual slavery. The cops also are dealing with Congressman Ethan Leighton whose rising career may be on the skids after he fled the scene of a car accident to cover up an extramarital affair.
Fairstein balances glimpses of New York City history that parallel the contemporary events of "Hell Gate." The horrific importing of young women later forced into prostitution seems ripped from the headlines, but the practice is centuries-old. The 21st century didn't spawn politicians cheating on their wives or denying parenthood, nor are politicial corruption and slush funds modern inventions. All that's changed, Fairstein shows, is the way these events unfurl.
Each outing with Alex brings new insight, and Fairstein is careful not to make her a super sleuth; she is a prosecutor whose job takes her behind the scenes of crimes but, as in real life, the detectives do the investigating.
Showing posts with label Fairstein Linda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fairstein Linda. Show all posts
Thursday, May 20, 2010
Review of Hell Gate by Linda Fairstein
From South Florida Sun-Sentinel --
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
Interview with Linda Fairstein
From Entertainment Weekly --
Questions for Linda Fairstein --
By: Catherine Garcia --
Mar 19 2010 --
If it seems like crime novelist Linda Fairstein has intimate knowledge of the world she writes about, it’s because she lived it. For 30 years, Fairstein worked at the Manhattan District Attorney’s office, serving as head of the sex crimes unit. Her Alex Cooper series is based on the time she spent there; its 12th volume, Hell Gate, out now and on the New York Times Bestseller List. She spoke with EW.com about the writing process, using New York City as a character and what it ’s like being a Law & Order: SVU inspiration.
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Tell us a little bit about Hell Gate.
LINDA FAIRSTEIN: Alex Cooper is a young prosecutor, and has the job that I had for 30 years. I always try to take my reader into a world that explores some aspect of New York City’s history or current events. Two years ago, the idea for this was political scandals, [sparked by] two events. One was [former New York governor] Eliot Spitzer’s fall from grace. He had been a colleague of mine in the Manhattan D.A.’s office. I was just shocked because I knew him to be a brilliant lawyer and have a lovely family. Shortly after that happened, there was a New York City congressman from Staten Island named Vito Fossella. He had a wife and kids on Staten Island…and it turned out he had a child by his mistress in D.C. Before John Edwards, before Gov. Sanford, I thought about exploring political scandals and the duplicity of people we think have integrity and we’ve elected to public office and how it impacts things.
Your books are very New York centric — the city is like a character. How do you decide what parts of New York make it into the story?
Usually there’s a theme in the book. [Take] Lethal Legacy. I’ve always been fascinated by rare book collectors and rare maps, so I used the New York Public Library as the backdrop for it. It’s such a magnificent building rich with history and treasures.
What’s your favorite part of the writing process? Coming up with ideas, research, the actual writing?
For me, it’s the writing. It’s why I chose to leave the courtroom and tell stories. Secondly, the research is great fun. I can’t imagine being one of the authors who hires researchers; I just love getting into places and smelling them and feeling the texture and trying to recreate it. Third, the plotting. That’s the toughest. That’s really the hardest part, I think especially writing crime novels, because the readers are very smart and like to puzzle out the clues. You try to be one or two steps ahead of them but it’s not always successful.
When did you decide you wanted to be a writer?
I had always, from a teenager on, wanted to be a writer. My father, with whom I was very close, so I say this with a big smile on my face, he was very supportive and he used to roll his eyes and say, ‘Oh, you have nothing to write about, you need a career.’ So my other choice was public service. I went to law school knowing that I really could not sit in a garret and write poetry or the great American novel. But I never gave up the dream that I would one day write. I never guessed how much material I’d get in the D.A.’s office. What actually happened was in the late 1980s, a publisher came to me to ask me about writing a nonfiction book about our groundbreaking work in the D.A.’s office. I got permission from my boss and the city to write that first. It was very well respected and reviewed, so I went back to my boss and said, ‘I’ve always wanted to write novels.’ We just had the same rule we had with the nonfiction rule — obviously you can’t do it on city time. So I did write the first four novels in the series while doing both jobs.
How did you find the time?
Weekends, early mornings, vacations.
What made you decide to pursue writing full-time?
It was 30 years and I loved every minute of it. I left six months after 9/11 happened. I was in my office, I saw the second plane hit the towers ten blocks away, and it was truly a time for me to reassess what mattered to me. My husband had just retired and it just seemed like a perfect time to segue into spending more time with him. There were plenty of great people in the D.A.’s office to carry on my work. I still am a lawyer, I still keep my credits current, and I do a lot of non-profit work for victims of violence so that keeps my hand in the old job. I get to do both.
How much of you is in Alex?
Her professional work is very much my passion — my interest in the work, my temperament and what I loved, how I thrived on trying to get justice for victims of violence. I get to take real poetic license. She’s younger, thinner and blonder. She has a trust fund, which I don’t have. Because she’s younger, she didn’t have a lot of the struggles that women had in the ’70s and ’80s breaking into law. Many of the people in the book are composites — nobody is an exact person, but a lot of my friends are represented warmly by characters like them. People who cross me, watch out! You’ll be in a book! (laughs)
The character of ADA Alex Cabot on Law & Order: SVU was based on you. How does that make you feel?
That got started in the brilliant mind of Dick Wolf, who created the show. He knew our unit and has said publically many times that he based the show on our unit and the P.D.’s unit and Alex Cabot’s character on me, although I get no royalties! (laughs) It was entirely his idea to take the public persona of what I do and what I did and make a character out of it. I’m fine with it. It would be fun if I got royalities or a cameo but I just enjoy it. Both Stephanie March [who played Cabot] and Mariska Hargitay [who plays Det. Olivia Benson] have been wonderful allies in the victim advocacy movement. I adore them. They’ve done a really dignified job of bringing those issues to primetime television, which quite frankly I never dreamed would happen 10 years ago.
Thursday, April 1, 2010
Interview with Linda Fairstein
From NY DAILY NEWS --
'Hell Gate' author Linda Fairstein finds mystery in Gracie Mansion, home of New York's mayor --
By: Gina Salamone --
March 7th 2010 --
From skulls surfacing in City Hall Park to a body turning up behind Gracie Mansion, some scandalous scenes take place at local landmarks in "Hell Gate."
Author Linda Fairstein didn't have to delve too deep for inspiration for the legal thriller, which hits shelves Tuesday. Many sites and characters were plucked from New York City's news and her own experiences.
Fairstein, 62, headed the sex- crimes unit of the Manhattan DA's office from 1976 to 2002. "Hell Gate" marks the 12th book in her successful crime series about fictional prosecutor Alexandra Cooper.
In the latest novel, Gracie Mansion serves as the center of a murder investigation when a body is found in a well there.
While there's no real well on the upper East Side home's grounds, the body of a man with a knife wound was found in Carl Schurz Park outside Gracie Mansion in 2004, and other crimes occur in the park from time to time.
Fairstein herself has attended many functions at the mansion, the mayor's official residence (though Mayor Bloomberg chooses not to live there).
"It had a history and physical beauty that fascinated me, when you consider that it was built 200 years ago as a summer home when this part of the island was not populated," she says. "People took a boat ride 5 miles away to get away from the congestion and the disease in lower Manhattan. So it was one spot on my list of places to get to" in the books.
The house overlooks Hell Gate, the narrow East River strait that separates Astoria from Randalls Island. Its rough waters are difficult to navigate because of strong tidal flows.
As cops and Cooper canvass the house for clues in the book's murder case, they marvel at the mansion's history. It was built in 1799. Mayor Robert Wagner's wife, Susan, added a new west wing that was completed in 1966.
Inside, stairs lead up to the Blue Ballroom. "This is the huge entertaining space that is the new wing," Fairstein says. "It's just an incredibly gracious and beautiful, entertaining space. That's the way most New Yorkers would come into the house."
In the book, police search the state bedroom upstairs. "Nelson Mandela has stayed in there," Fairstein says. "If you look out over the river, I think you see every borough, except Staten Island, from the second floor of the house."
The home's library is where Cooper and the detectives have their first discussion about the murder.
In the book, a detective mentions all the financial help Bloomberg has anonymously donated to restore the home and track down some of its original furniture. In reality, the mayor has been just as generous.
"The dining room has furniture that has been found and restored," Fairstein says. "The mirror in there has an eagle with a ball and chain in its claws. It's the symbol of the revolution, as the eagle is lifting the ball and chain of oppression from British rule."
The cannonball on display in the mansion's parlor is more than ornamental. "The house was destroyed during the Revolutionary War by cannon fire from Willets Point in Queens and one of the cannonballs was found. So that literally sits in the yellow room, which is a big entertaining parlor," says the author.
Gracie isn't the only mansion that plays a part in "Hell Gate." Hamilton Grange in Harlem and the Morris-Jumel Mansion, which has had reports of being haunted, also appear.
"While I was doing my research, the head of the Gracie Mansion Conservancy told me that there were three, and only three, Federal Period wooden mansions that still exist in Manhattan," Fairstein explains. "So that led me to the other two. Then my research led me to this link among the three of them that involved a murder case from 1800. And that was almost uncanny - that there really was a crime that connected the owners of the three homes."
If that's not shocking enough, few New Yorkers know of the bodies that were buried in City Hall Park and just north of it.
In "Hell Gate," Cooper trips while leaving the building and finds herself face to face with a jawbone in the ditch by a path.
It's not too far-fetched. In 1991, a building project revealed remains of 427 bodies beneath a parking lot about two blocks north of City Hall. They are believed to be part of a long-lost African burial ground. And in 1999, a renovation of City Hall Park turned up Colonial burials — though their history is unclear.
"I don't think, at this moment, you'll see skulls and femurs there," Fairstein admits. "But they're around."
It's not only well-known buildings that show up in "Hell Gate," but the city's far-reaching neighborhoods like Douglaston, Queens. Cooper's favorite restaurants — like Primola on the upper East Side — are Fairstein's, too.
"A lot of out-of-towners will walk in and say, 'Does Linda Fairstein really eat here?' " the author says. "What's her favorite drink? So it's fun for the restaurant owners. And it's fun for me. The mix of real with fictional has always been one of the things that makes me smile when I write."
Sunday, January 10, 2010
Fiction Book Reviews: 1/4/2010 (Linda Fairstein)
From Publishers Weekly --
Fiction Book Reviews: 1/4/2010 --
1/4/2010 --
Hell Gate Linda Fairstein. Dutton, $26.95 (416p) ISBN 978-0-525-95161-2
At the outset of bestseller Fairstein’s winning 12th legal thriller featuring New York County ADA Alex Cooper (after Lethal Legacy), the bodies of human trafficking victims wash up on Rockaway Beach. At least one young woman appears to have been dead before she hit the frigid waters. Meanwhile, Ethan Leighton, a rising Manhattan congressman, has fled the scene of a car accident, possibly to avoid exposure of an extramarital affair and a love child. Leighton’s paramour, who calls 911 to report that Leighton has threatened her, later disappears amid signs of violence. Both cases attract the keen attention of Vin Statler, New York’s ambitious post-Bloomberg mayor, who adds political pressure to the crime solving. Fairstein throws a City Council slush fund into the mix, but manages to resolve the various plot threads nicely. While the main criminal’s identity will surprise few, readers seeking a realistic depiction of law-enforcement work will be more than satisfied. 8-city author tour. (Mar.)
Sunday, November 29, 2009
In Print : First look at new Fairstein mystery
From The Martha's Vineyard Times --
In Print : First look at new Fairstein mystery --
By Jack Shea --
Published: November 25, 2009 --
"Hell Gate" by Linda Fairstein, Dutton Adult, March, 2010, 416 pages, $26.95.
Visitors to New York City occasionally glimpse one of the handful of restored 18th and 19th century manses, most on the edges of Manhattan. Chilmark summer resident Linda Fairstein uses several of them, including the mayor's official residence, Gracie Mansion, as key elements in her latest crime thriller, "Hell Gate."
The hefty book is scheduled for release in March 2010, published by the Dutton imprint of Penguin Books. It is the 12th in Ms. Fairstein's series of crime mysteries that feature protagonist Alexandra Cooper, head of the Sex Crimes Unit of the district attorney's office.
The book takes its name from a turbulent strait in the East River between Astoria, Queens, and Manhattan's Randall's Island that claimed hundreds of ships and their crews during New York's early maritime days. In the novel, a freighter with human cargo has run aground off a beach in Queens, dumping bodies into the cold January water.
Ms. Cooper gets the call because it's become clear that the rusty Golden Odyssey has human cargo that includes women passengers bound for the sex trade. Earlier the same morning, an up-and-coming New York City family man congressman lands in legal hot water over his girlfriend, a development that may be related to the white slavery beaching. Ms. Cooper catches the congressman's case as well.
Her job is to protect women such as the washing ashore eastern European waifs who've been branded with iconic tattoos identifying them as the property of a specific white slaver, or "snakehead" in police jargon.
Ms. Fairstein had that job, protecting women, for 30 years. She spent the last 25 years of her career leading sex crime investigations and trials involving sexual assault, domestic violence, child abuse, and homicide for the Manhattan District Attorney's office. The Vassar and University of Virginia Law school graduate left her legal career in 2002 after writing her first book, "Final Jeopardy," in 1996. Like her protagonist, Ms. Fairstein divides her time between the canyons of Manhattan and the beaches of Chilmark where she and husband Justin Feldman have a home.
Her approach to a female crime-fighting character is different from the norm. Most other popular female crime heroines, like Janet Evanovitch's Stephanie Plum and Sue Grafton's Kinsey Milhone, are tough, wrong-side-of-the-tracks characters, talking the spare, staccato street talk of the crime novel genre. They are bounty hunters and private investigators - sleuths without portfolio, so to speak.
Not so Ms. Cooper. She is well-bred, well-educated and well-heeled. Car doors are opened for her. Her speaking style is long and lyrical. Make no mistake, though. Ms. Fairstein talked her fictional talk in her real life. The infamous "Preppy" murders (the prosecution of Robert Chambers in 1988), and a seemingly endless string of "wilding" crimes in that era occurred on her watch.
This reviewer is used to reading crime novels that race to their conclusion, but the uninitiated Fairstein reader must often slow down. This book is a page-turner - but not at top speed. For one thing, there is civility to the dialogue, despite the wisecracking of sidekick cop Mike Chapman. For another, Ms. Fairstein includes a lot of real-life behind the scenes procedural detail that some readers might prefer to skip. But there are benefits to slowing down the read and paying attention to the real life aspects.
For one thing, the author is an experienced New York courtroom lawyer, arguably the world's largest legal circus. She plans carefully and connects the dots. Go too fast and you'll miss something - like the fact that Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr were co-counsels in one New York trial case.
For another, New York City is a central character in her novels. Manhattan's massive and endlessly fascinating sprawl has been creating history for nearly 400 years, and each of Ms. Fairstein's books plumbs an aspect of city history, twinning her plot line with often seemingly mundane historical antecedents that tie to the plot in innovative ways.
Other novelists as disparate as E.L. Doctorow and Jimmy Breslin have found themselves fascinated with the various workings of the city, like New York's system of water pipes and aqueducts, but Ms. Fairstein provides a decidedly different take on the subject, as demonstrated in her 2007 novel, "Bad Blood." Other Alexandra Cooper plots involve city museums, the public library and Lincoln Center.
Would I like the action to go faster? Yes. Would I like Alex Cooper to be harder, crisper and tougher? Yes. But do I believe that I've read a real account of thinly-disguised crimes and the workings of a politically-tainted big city criminal justice system, written by someone to whom justice is extremely important? Yes.
Sunday, March 29, 2009
Book Review: Books at center of murder tale (Linda Fairstein)
From Oklahoma's NewsOK --
Book Review: Books at center of murder tale --
March 29, 2009 --
In Linda Fairstein’s "Lethal Legacy” (Doubleday, $26), Alexandra Cooper, head of the district attorney’s sex crimes unit in Manhattan, finds Tina Barr chloroformed and gagged in her Upper East Side apartment.
A neighbor tells Alex and police that he thinks she might have been sexually assaulted by a man wearing a fireman’s mask. The victim, a conservator of rare books and ancient maps, refuses to cooperate with police, leaves the hospital and disappears.
A day later, another woman is found in the same apartment, bludgeoned to death with a rare book beneath her body. The second victim’s employer, Minerva Hunt, says the book was stolen from her family.
Minerva and her brother are sibling rivals trying to persuade their ailing father, a major benefactor of the New York Public Library, to change his will so they can benefit from his estate. Barr, who had been working for a private collector, once was employed by the library and worked on the Hunt collection.
Alex and her two investigators, Mike Chapman and Mercer Wallace, note the dead woman, wearing some of Minerva’s old clothing, might have been set up for the attack. They wonder whether the daughter of a wealthy New York family would kill for the family treasures.
The three turn their investigation to the library, where they search the great collections and make their way into the underground vaults, through the stacks of ancient volumes to a door opening to a park that once was the graveyard of New York’s early settlers. There they find Tina Barr’s body.
Numerous clues and a host of weird suspects lead readers on a sometimes confusing search, but trips through the library make it worthwhile for those who love books and maps.
— Kay Dyer
Thursday, March 12, 2009
In Print : Legacy of suspense (Linda Fairstein)
From The Martha's Vineyards Times --
In Print : Legacy of suspense --
By Cynthia Riggs --
Published: March 12, 2009 --
"Lethal Legacy," by Linda Fairstein, Doubleday, New York, 2009, 372 pp., $26. --
First, a disclaimer: I will probably not be entirely objective in my review of Linda Fairstein's latest book, "Lethal Legacy," her 11th and best yet in the Alexandra Cooper series. I am a great fan of Ms. Fairstein, a mystery writer who summers in Chilmark, and who served as head of the sex crimes unit of the Manhattan District Attorney's office from 1976 until 2002. The only book of hers I have not read is her non-fiction work, "Sexual Violence: Our War Against Rape," but I suspect I'd find that every bit as compelling as her fiction.
Like most of the Alexandra Cooper books, "Lethal Legacy" involves one of New York City's landmark buildings, in this case the New York Public Library. The book takes us, even those who know New York well, into places only an insider can view. We explore the library from the attic to its spooky underground storage stacks beneath Bryant Park, where there are - "Books. Eighty-eight miles of books."
Along the way we learn enticing snippets of library history. An apartment was built in the library in 1908 for the building's engineer, who lived there with his family for many years. We also learn a great deal about ancient maps and the preservation of valuable books.
"Lethal Legacy" makes clear how the New York City Sex Crimes Unit must employ an extraordinary amount of tenderness, understanding, diplomacy, and strength in dealing with victims and families during an investigation.
While the setting is rich, the characters are even richer. Homicide detectives Mike Chapman and Mercer Wallace call upon Alex, who is Assistant District Attorney in charge of the DA's Sex Crimes Prosecution Unit, whenever a sex crime is committed. Chapman, halfway in love with Alex, is an expert on military history, foul mouthed, outspoken, rough, and utterly dependable when it comes to Alex's safety. He is a character so real, I expect to meet him in person one of these days. Wallace, an equally dependable defender of Alex, is the peacemaker, a quiet, handsome family man. The three make an engaging team. The two detectives rely on Alex's knowledge in dealing with traumatized victims, and Alex steps back from their homicide investigations. She is thrown into some terrifying situations, but we never really worry - Mike and Mercer will show up in time to rescue her.
In "Lethal Legacy" Alex is summoned to an apartment house on Manhattan's Upper East Side where a neighbor is convinced that a young woman has been assaulted. The young woman, a conservator of rare books and maps, refuses to cooperate. This begins the absorbing tale of murder, forgeries, stolen books, ancient maps, family rivalries, blackmail, and vast amounts of money.
"Lethal Legacy" is not a quick read. There is a lot of information to absorb. At times, Ms. Fairstein seems to move away from the compelling plot by giving us so much detail on ancient books and maps, but read on. She knows what she's doing, and the pieces all fit smoothly together without a wasted word.
During the three decades Ms. Fairstein was with the DA's office, she prosecuted several high-profile cases. She left the DA's office in 2002 and continues to write, lecture, and consult.
I lost one full night's sleep by reading "Lethal Legacy." As the dawn chorus tuned up outside, and the sun rose, I closed the book, fully satisfied.
West Tisbury resident Cynthia Riggs is the author of nine mystery novels whose capers are all set on the Vineyard. Her latest book, "Death and Honesty," will be released this spring.
Sunday, March 8, 2009
TIME FOR A 'LETHAL' INJECTION OF THRILLS (Linda Fairstein)
From Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star --
TIME FOR A 'LETHAL' INJECTION OF THRILLS --
Fairstein's Alex Cooper returns to readers in 'Lethal Legacy' --
Date published: 3/8/2009 --
AUTHOR Linda Fairstein brings back Manhattan Assistant District Attorney Alex Cooper in "Lethal Legacy."
Coop and her colleagues are looking for a man who posed as a firefighter to gain access to a woman's apartment, only to assault her. The victim, Tina Barr, a conservator at the New York Public Library, is secretive about her assault and her past.
A few days later, another woman turns up dead in her apartment. They believe it to be a wealthy heiress, but the heiress tells investigators the dead woman is her maid.
When Barr goes missing and another body is found, the mystery is in full swing.
Fairstein does a great job weaving interesting facts about New York into her mysteries. In "Lethal Legacy," readers will learn there are 88 miles of books in a library extension under Bryant Park, which was once a potter's field for those killed in the Revolutionary War.
In addition, a family of five used to live in the library. John H. Felder was the first chief engineer and moved into the library in 1910, 10 months before the famed building opened. Their third child, Viviani, was the only child ever born inside the library, where the family lived until 1941.
But among the interesting facts is an even more interesting mystery, complete with greed, family drama and ancient literary treasures that some people think are worth killing for.
Laura L. Hutchison is an editor at The Free Lance-Star.
Sunday, March 1, 2009
NYC and its people star in 'Lethal Legacy' (Linda Fairstein)
From Pittsburgh Tribune-Review --
NYC and its people star in 'Lethal Legacy' --
By Oline H. Cogdill, McCLATCHY-TRIBUNE --
Sunday, March 1, 2009 --
A hallmark of Linda Fairstein's fine legal thrillers is the behind-the-scenes view of New York City that may be new to even those who think they are experts on the Big Apple. In "Lethal Legacy," Fairstein gives an insider's view of that most benign and sturdy of cultural institutions -- the New York Public Library.
From the catacombs beneath the building to hidden rooms and forgotten apartments, Fairstein imagines the library as a fairly spooky place where anything can happen. It takes more than just those two wonderful lions out front -- which, by the way, are named Patience and Fortitude -- to guard this New York stalwart, "the soul of the community."
But "Lethal Legacy" isn't just an armchair travel guide. Fairstein brings her A game to her 11th Alexandra Cooper novel with a top-notch plot, realistic situations and believable characters.
Alex, an assistant D.A. and sex-crimes prosecutor, is trying to help a rare-books restorer who may have been the victim of an assault. The investigation leads back to the viperous Minerva and Talbot Hunt, wealthy sister and brother bibliophiles whose hatred of each other is "as ugly as anything in Greek mythology."
Fairstein seamlessly weaves in ancient maps, manuscript restoration and rare books, illustrating that forensic science comes in many forms. Fairstein makes a trip to the library exciting and dangerous -- even if you just came for the books.
Each outing with Alex gives new insight to this character. The author is careful not to make Alex a super sleuth; she is a prosecutor whose job takes her behind the scenes of crimes but, as in real life, the detectives do the investigating. Alex's close friendship with the two detectives and their devotion to the final question of "Jeopardy" bring a texture to Fairstein's novels.
In a genre crowded with legal thrillers, Fairstein's affinity for telling stories of New York and its people stand out.
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