Defense attorney Robin Lockwood faces an unimaginable personal disaster and her greatest professional challenge in the next New York Times bestselling Phillip Margolin's new legal thriller, The Darkest Place. Robin Lockwood is an increasingly prominent defense attorney in the …
Defense attorney Robin Lockwood faces an unimaginable personal disaster and her greatest professional challenge in the next New York Times bestselling Phillip Margolin's new legal thriller, The Darkest Place.Robin Lockwood is an increasingly prominen... A Matter of Life and Death Mar-2021 / Mystery Robin Lockwood - 4
Jan 17, 2014 · Margolin has used real events for the basis of a book before. His first novel, 1978’s Edgar-finalist Hearthstone (Harper), is a fictionalized account of one of …
About Phillip Margolin My Story & Background I grew up in New York City and Levittown, New York. In 1965, I graduated from The American University in Washington, D.C. with a Bachelor's Degree in Government. From 1965 to 1967, I was a Peace Corps volunteer in Liberia,
I grew up in New York City and Levittown, New York. In 1965, I graduated from the American University in Washington, D.C., with a bachelor's degree in government. I spent 1965 to 1967 in Liberia, West Africa, as a Peace Corps volunteer, graduated from New York University School of Law in 1970 as a night student.
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Robin Lockwood - 2. The “master of heart-pounding suspense” ―New York Times bestseller Phillip Margolin―returns with a new legal thriller starring Robin Lockwood. A young woman accuses a prominent local college athlete of rape. Convicted with the help of undis...
Thursday: Subject is still combative after four days of applied pain, sleep deprivation and minimal food. Vice squad detective Bobby Vasquez, for months on the trail of a slippery underworld figure, receives an anonymous tip that directs him to a ...
May-2004. / Thriller. Seventeen-year-old Ashley Spencer learned what true horror was the night a serial killer invaded her home and brutally murdered her father and her best friend. But the terror did not end there ... A year after the unspeakable events, Ashley is sti...
Known for his critically acclaimed contemporary thrillers, New York Times bestselling author Phillip Margolin explores intriguing new territory in Worthy Brown's Daughter, a compelling historical drama, set in nineteenth-century Oregon, that combines...
Private investigator Dana Cutler must take down a cunning psychopath before he can pull off the perfect crime, in Sleight of Hand, a novel of suspense from Phillip Margolin, New York Times bestselling author of Capitol Murder and Supreme Justice. ...
Defense attorney Robin Lockwood faces an unimaginable personal disaster and her greatest professional challenge in the next New York Times bestselling Phillip Margolin's new legal thriller, The Darkest Place.Robin Lockwood is an increasingly prominen...
Dana Cutler - 1. When private detective Dana Cutler is hired to follow college student Charlotte Walsh, she never imagines the trail will lead to the White House. But the morning after Walsh's clandestine meeting with Christopher Farrington, President of the United S...
She is hired by a mysterious multi-millionaire who may be the Rose Killer, a horrifying serial killer who dehumanizes women before he kills them. This puts the heroine’s personal ethics and morals at odds with her duty as a defense attorney to represent anyone no matter who they are or what crime they have committed.
Willamette Writers awarded me the 2009 Distinguished Northwest Writers Award. Supreme Justice, was published by HarperCollins in May, 2010. Capitol Murder was published by HarperCollins in April, 2012. Sleight of Hand was published by HarperCollins in April, 2013.
The Adventure of the Purloined Paget written by me and my brother Jerry Margolin was published in A Study in Sherlock in October, 2011 by Random House.
Proof Positive was published by HarperCollins in July, 2006. Executive Privilege was published by HarperCollins in May, 2008 and in 2009 was awarded the Spotted Owl Award for the Best Northwest Mystery. Fugitive, was published by HarperCollins on June 2, 2009.
After Dark was a Book of the Month Club selection. The Burning Man, my fifth novel, published in August, 1996, was the Main Selection of the Literary Guild and a Reader’s Digest condensed book. My sixth novel, The Undertaker’s Widow, was published in 1998 and was a Book of the Month Club selection.
The Associate was published by HarperCollins in August, 2001 and Ties that Bind was published by HarperCollins in March, 2003. My tenth novel, Sleeping Beauty, was published by HarperCollins on March 23, 2004. Lost Lake was published by HarperCollins in March, 2005 and was nominated for an Oregon Book Award.
Balch was, writes The Oregon Encyclopedia, “the first Pacific Northwest fiction writer to cast Native Americans as major characters and the first to celebrate the region's geography in a novel.”. A Hood River pastor and amateur anthropologist, he was just reaching maturity as a writer when tuberculosis struck him down.
"Who is this Walt Curtis person anyway?" iconic Beat poet Allen Ginsberg once joked at a 1960s antiwar protest. He is, as the late Ginsberg knew, a talented poet -- as well as a KBOO talker, musician and enthusiastic advocate for Oregon literature, describing himself as "a scholar of forgotten and neglected Oregon writers."
"Marooned in Crater Lake.'' The subtitle of Alfred Powers' 1930 book promises "Stories, with Original Situations and Ingenious Plots, of the Skyline Trail, and the Old Oregon Trail," and the pages that follow do not disappoint. Oregon poet Walt Curtis enthuses about the book: "The lead adventure is as good as Jack London's work. The boy, Jim, is stranded in the caldera of Crater Lake. How will he escape? The boy had 24 1-cent stamps with Benjamin Franklin's face on them. They'd save his life."
"The Grail: A Year Ambling and Shambling Through an Oregon Vineyard in Pursuit of the Best Pinot Noir Wine in the Whole Wild World." A nonfiction book about a winery's operation doesn't promise a thrilling read. But Brian Doyle has a unique ability to enliven the everyday. "With the author's bubbly sense of humor and sharp storytelling, dry facts become delightful tidbits," Publishers Weekly pointed out. "His description of the grape vines' pollination process, for instance, bursts with sexual metaphors: 'the wild seething scene in the vineyard, the vines fertilizing each other madly when no one is looking, the little tiny bras, the little tiny cigarettes, the recriminations at dawn.'" You'll feel drunk with words after reading this book, and there will be no recriminations at dawn or any other time.
In the 1920s, the critic H.L. Mencken declared Chicago the "literary capital of the United States.". New York City, of course, has been a magnet for writers throughout its long history.
"The Luckiest Girl": Beverly Cleary is best known for her Ramona Quimby stories, but one of her best books focuses not on young Ramona but on a high-school junior named Shelley. In 1959, Abigail Van Buren -- the influential "Dear Abby" columnist -- hailed Cleary's "The Luckiest Girl," writing : "I recommend this excellent book for all girls aged 12 and 13 whose mothers don't 'understand' them."
Frances Fuller Victor (1826-1902) Known as the "Mother of Oregon history," Victor wrote about Oregon and the West in unsentimental terms, sometimes sparking controversy for offering the unvarnished truth rather than the popular myth.
To Kill a Mockingbird, Anatomy of a Murder, Presumed Innocent, The Firm. Most legal fiction top 10 lists include one or more of these recognizable titles.
To Kill a Mockingbird, Anatomy of a Murder, Presumed Innocent, The Firm. Most legal fiction top 10 lists include one or more of these recognizable titles.
Malice Prepense (Barbara Holloway, Bk 3) by Kate Wilhelm. A Meeting at Corvallis by S. M. Stirling. Melody Jackson and the House on Lafayette Street by B.M.B. Johnson. A Mending at the Edge by Jane Kirkpatrick. The Mirror Pond Murders by Ted Haynes.
The Bridge of the Gods: A Romance of Indian Oregon by Frederick Homer Balch. Children of the River by Linda Crew. Clean Breaks by Ruby Lang. Clear and Convincing Proof (Barbara Holloway, Bk 7) by Kate Wilhelm. Cold Case (Barbara Holloway, Bk 11) by Kate Wilhelm. The Cove by Catherine Coulter.
Going to Bend: A Novel by Diane Hammond. The Golden Telescope: Book One in the Jack and the Magic Hat Maker series by Tracy Partridge-Johnson. Gone, But Not Forgotten by Phillip Margolin. Hard Knocks by Ruby Lang.
The Angry Beavers. Bates Motel, set in Oregon, but filmed in British Columbia. Best Friends Whenever. Crash & Bernstein. Eureka, set in Oregon, but filmed in British Columbia. Free Agents, set in Portland, but filmed in Los Angeles. Gravity Falls, set in the Detroit Lake area of Oregon. Grimm, set and filmed in Portland.