Pages: 208 (Paperback) ISBN: 014103064X Pub: Penguin Pub date: 2008-07-03 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 14091
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Reader Reviews:An east wind blowing through Mortimer Mansions (2/2 people found this helpful)Fact - there is no bigger Rumpole fan than me. So I have to report with considerable sadness that the latest Rumpole is IMHO the work of a tired and/or ill old man.
Rumpole lives on (0/0 people found this helpful)I am a criminal lawyer and mourn the fact that we don't have many characters in the legal profession these days. Oh for a Horace Rumpole at my local Magistrates' Court rather than anxious young pin-stripes regurgitating their Sentencing Guidelines to a bored bunch of JP's. I've read all the Rumpole adventures and whilst there is often a convenient last-minute witness to save the day (it doesn't happen in real life!) I agree with another reviewer that Mortimer's writings often induce embarrassing snorts of laughter in the most public of places. I like the fact that Rumpole wrestles with modern day crime and sentences without compromising his principles. I was pleased he didn't take silk as he would have lost that charm of the oldest junior hack on the circuit. I've no idea how old Rumpole is but he must be in his eighties and yet he still scratches around chambers for a brief and preferably one which will allow him to show off his knowledge of blood stains. The story is largely predictable and a little short but great fun. "I'm afraid what we have here is a case of premature adjudication." (6/6 people found this helpful)The irascible Horace Rumpole is definitely not mellowing with age. Concerned with what he sees as a country-wide erosion of civil liberties, Rumpole is representing Peter Timson, a twelve-year-old member of the criminal clan of Timsons, which has provided Rumpole with a steady court income over the years. Peter has been served with an ASBO, an Anti-Social Behavior Order, because he has been playing ball in the street and has had to enter an exclusive neighborhood in order to retrieve his ball. If there is any repetition of this, he will go to court. As Rumpole is grumbling about the absurdity of this order, he is served with his own ASBO--secured by his fellow barristers and staff--because he eats lunch, drinks Chateau Thames Embankment, and smokes cigarillos in chambers, behavior the rest of the group abhors.
White space and more white space..... (1/1 people found this helpful)John Mortimer's Rumpole books are never less than an enjoyable read, but this one is over so quickly you wonder it qualifies for full book status at all!
This book deserves an ASBO (0/0 people found this helpful)I agree completely with reviewers who have complained of the price of this very short novel. The price for a book of less than 200 pages OF VERY LARGE TYPE, is daylight robbery. I have been a Rumpole devotee for years - but to quote a previous reviewer - never again. Can't Mr. Mortimer find another vehicle for his political polemics?? Similar ProductsRumpole and the Reign of Terror The Private Patient (Adam Dalgliesh Mystery) CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
Books -> Subjects -> Crime, Thrillers & Mystery -> Authors, A-Z -> M -> Mortimer, John
Books -> Subjects -> Crime, Thrillers & Mystery -> Thrillers -> General AAS Books -> Subjects -> Fiction -> General Books -> Subjects -> Fiction -> General AAS Books -> Refinements -> Language (feature_browse-bin) -> English Books -> Refinements -> Format (binding_browse-bin) -> Paperback Books -> Refinements -> Font Size (format_browse-bin) -> Regular Size
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