Wilde Lake

a novel

No cover

Laura Lippman: Wilde Lake (2016, William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers)

352 pages

English language

Published May 2, 2016 by William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers.

ISBN:
978-0-06-208345-6
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
938788633

View on OpenLibrary

3 stars (2 reviews)

Luisa "Lu" Brant is the newly elected--and first female, state's attorney of Howard County, Maryland, a job in which her widower father famously served. Fiercely intelligent and ambitious, she sees an opportunity to make her name by trying a mentally disturbed drifter accused of beating a woman to death in her home. It's not the kind of case that makes headlines, but peaceful Howard county doesn't see many homicides. As Lu prepares for the trial, the case dredges up painful memories, reminding her small but tight-knit family of the night when her brother, AJ, saved his best friend at the cost of another man's life. Only eighteen, AJ was cleared by a grand jury. Now, Lu wonders if the events of 1980 happened as she remembers them. What details might have been withheld from her when she was a child?

1 edition

Review of 'Wilde Lake' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Not a great one by Ms. Lippman. I didn't find the reminiscences of a 7yo, hanging with her older brother, to be all that interesting. And today's woman didn't hold much interest either. Not even sure it was all that important to the Plot, as thin as that was. Not much really happened and it all strung together very weakly.

Review of 'Wilde Lake' on 'LibraryThing'

No rating

Review reposted from Reviewing the Evidence with permission. returnreturn Laura Lippman is a fine novelist who frequently writes about the complexity of teenage friendships, the reverberations of crime, and her beloved home, Baltimore. Her latest stand-alone novel involves all three, though rather than using an urban setting, she sets her story in Columbia, Maryland, a utopian "new city" built in the late 1960s as an idealistic suburb between Baltimore and Washington DC. Lippman captures both the optimism that drove the urban exodus and its false front of harmony and wholesomeness, a dichotomy of surfaces and submerged, murky reality that runs throughout the book.returnreturnLu Brandt, a lawyer who is small in stature but fiercely ambitious, has just won an election to serve as the county's first woman state's attorney, a position her father held with distinction for many years. There aren't a lot of homicides in her jurisdiction, so she eagerly …

Subjects

  • Trials (Homicide)
  • Fiction
  • Government attorneys
  • Women lawyers

Places

  • Howard County (Md.)