Dark Harbor by David Hosp
Requirements: MP3 Player, Duration: 11 hours 57 minutes, Size: 329Mb
Overview: Scott Finn, rising star at a Boston law firm, has worked hard to pull himself out of the Charlestown projects. When the body of his co-worker and old flame, Natalie Caldwell, floats to the surface of Boston Harbor, Finn is grief stricken. But almost immediately, he 19s tapped by the firm to replace her in the defense of a high-profile client. As he retraces Natalie 19s footsteps, Finn begins to unravel the awful mystery of her murder. But police lieutenant Linda Flaherty is also hot on the trail. What neither Finn nor Flaherty realize is what 19s at stake if the truth is uncovered: billions of dollars, the careers of the Massachusetts elite, and their own survival. Compelling characters pulse through attorney Hosp’s surprisingly engaging fiction debut. Why surprising? Because readers will think they’ve seen all this before, and more stylishly told: there’s a gritty urban center (Boston) menaced by a serial killer (nicknamed "Little Jack" because of his similarities to the legendary Ripper) but protected by a tough cop (prickly police lieutenant Linda Flaherty). But Hosp works some wrinkles on the formula with a terrorist subplot and digs deep for complex portraits of Flaherty and a jittery suspect, lawyer Scott Finn. Finn was the last known person to see Natalie Caldwell, the killer’s latest victim, alive: they were colleagues at the prestigious law firm as well as former lovers. At the time of her death, Natalie was defending a local security company against liability in the terrorist bombing of a commuter train. Grief over Natalie’s death exacerbates Finn’s feeling that he’s in over his head, both with Natalie’s case, which he inherits, and at the white shoe firm, where his humble roots and blue-collar affinities set him apart. Flaherty feels similarly besieged, though her demons are detective subordinates whom she can’t completely trust or control. Hosp’s plotting is shaggy and his book feels overlong, but by following his two protagonists into the mundane corners of their lives, he earns genuine empathy for these flawed human beings struggling to be both ethical and effective. Narrator: George Guidall.
Genre: Audiobooks, Fiction, Mystery/Thriller
Download Instructions:
http://corneey.com/wK91fR