Book Six of the bestselling Butch Karp legal thriller series: Karp becomes counsel to the Congressional investigation into the assassination of John Fitzgerald Kennedy --and uncovers more than he bargained for After many years working on some of the toughest felony cases in New York, prosecutor Butc
Corruption of Blood
β Scribed by Tanenbaum, Robert K
- Publisher
- A Signet Book, c1995.
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 2 MB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9781453210185
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
From
Another ''Who killed JFK'' book? Tanenbaum--former chief of the New York City District Attorney's Homicide Bureau and deputy chief counsel to the late-'70s House Select Committee on Assassinations--is more qualified to speculate, or fictionalize, than most. In this novel, it's Butch Karp who goes to work for the Select Committee, bringing along investigator Clay Fulton and attorney V. T. Newbury. Karp's wife, Marlene Ciampi, and toddler daughter, Lucy, stay in New York, but when the slimy district attorney throws a major pass, Marlene heads south. Oppressed by inactivity as a Washington ''wife of,'' she volunteers to organize the evidence a Select Committee member has gathered to clear his late father of the spying allegations that forced him out of government after World War II. Inevitably, the two investigations intersect, and all the usual suspects--Mafia capos and soldiers, past and present CIA agents and assets, past and present Russian spies, and Lee Harvey Oswald--dance once more across the stage. Tanenbaum's edgy tone is a good fit for the unsettling questions the American people may never resolve about that sunny afternoon in Dallas. Expect requests. Mary Carroll
Review
βWith Corruption of Blood, Tanenbaum is now the one to beat.β β_Publishers Weekly_
βLegal suspense like no one elseβsmart, fast-paced, Tanenbaumβs best yet.β βF. Lee Bailey
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
When Congress reopens the JFK case, Manhattan Assistant D.A. Butch Karp is tapped to head the investigation because he has the best homicide prosecution record in the New York D.A.'s office. He is the man who has tried over a hundred cases and lost not one. But barely has he left the department and