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Good Perry Mason, but not Great Perry Mason

Otherwise strong novel marred by the courtroom sceneIt should come as no surprise that the book ends with a dramatic courtroom confrontation. This time, though, the scene rings false. Mason confronts his D.A. nemesis, Hamilton Burger, but the D.A.'s actions seem unusually inept and cartoonish. Mason succeeds in making a fool of the man far too easily, and the book ends on an unimpressive note. This ending is especially unfortunate given the strong beginning. In setting up the preliminary hearing, Gardner does a wonderful job of presenting the lies of witnesses and suspects alike, leaving Mason with the difficult task of finding the truth in the pile of lies. In addition, the mystery here is one of Gardner's better ones. The clues are there, and the identity of the true culprit still comes as a surprise. The review, then, is mixed. Amid so many good things is the one false note, but the prominence of that note makes it a real clunker.


Not Perry Mason's best but still enjoyable"The Case of the Singing Skirt" is really a novel in two parts. The first part deals with the machinations of the various parties before court, and the second part puts Mason in his element--the courtroom. As a legal thriller, "The Case of the Singing Skirt" is passable, though not particularly exciting. Mason spends a great deal of time deflecting his opponent's thrusts, but only in the last few pages does Mason go on the offensive. As a result, this book is not the best forum for Mason's considerable legal expertise. As a mystery, there is little doubt who the murderer is. Once one starts with the premise that Mason's clients are, as a rule, innocent, there is little more to figure out. Still, eighty-five books with a single character do not come about by accident, and there is a fair amount of charm to "The Case of the Singing Skirt."


OK on QuickBooks, not OK for complete idiotsStill, I recommend this book over "QuickBooks 99 for Dummies."


A Two-base Hit

Not the best of Jameson

A story for those who like happy endings.

It was an adequate text to review DSM III criteria.

Pretty Good....Typical story of Dad with Kid, who needs a housekeeper/nanny and old g/f ends up with the job. There's several good scenes, but this is not a book to re-read.
Although, it's not really an 'expensive' book, so I could definitely say it's worth the money, for a one-time read, but not something you'd want to hang onto forever.