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HEIR TODAY . . .
by J.J. Lamb and Bette Golden Lamb
Five Star, August 2005
285 pages
$25.95
ISBN: 1594143560


Buy in the UK | Buy in Canada

Freelance writer Paige Alper and her husband Max receive a letter from a tracer firm in New York. For a hefty fee, the letter says, the heir tracers will locate a dead relative's assets and hand over some money. The dead relative is, of course, a black sheep, the most fascinating member of her family and a world-wandering sailor whom she doesn't see much of. Nor does her sister, who turns out to be a ten-carat bitch and even more interesting, even though she has only a minor role in the story.

Paige's sister Sheryl, is a grasping, quick-buck hausfrau who wants to sign away her rights immediately and get whatever small amount of cash is available. Paige, more astute, more suspicious and less in need of quick cash, declines to sign. She and her husband, crusading freelance journalist Max, set out to find Uncle Jock's money. Family conflict and some fine spats between sisters is one result.

What Max and Paige don't realize is that an evil Chinese organization with world-wide interests and tentacles has also been stalking Uncle Jock. That's because Jock, incautious sailor that he was, had for years been collecting damaging evidence against the Hong Kong-based crime syndicate. Jock was on a personal vendetta.

If this all sounds a little like that old comic strip Terry and the Pirates, it's not surprising. Nevertheless, Paige and Max are fun characters to follow, and even if their dialogue is sometimes right out of the forties, it's clear they have a solid relationship and are very supportive of each other. Couple conflict is not really in their makeup.

That's a good thing because their search takes them from the Far East up and down the California Coast, and to New York, among other places. They are attacked in any number of ingenious ways and it's a wonder they make it through even a single day with the power of the huge, malevolent, Asian gang arrayed against them.

It really is a lot of fun following this breathless pair on foot, on motorbike and by car, train and plane to a final solution. The book sports an intriguing cover and an awkward title.

Reviewed by Carl Brookins, November 2005

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Contact: Yvonne Klein (ymk@reviewingtheevidence.com)


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