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| The Legal Limit | 
enlarge | Author: Martin Clark Publisher: Knopf Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $13.95 You Save: $11.00 (44%)
New (38) Used (14) Collectible (2) from $11.43
Avg. Customer Rating: 27 reviews Sales Rank: 67530
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 368 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 5.9 x 1.4
ISBN: 0307268357 EAN: 9780307268358 ASIN: 0307268357
Publication Date: July 8, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
Martin Clark’s most remarkable novel yet is the gripping, complex story of a murder cover-up that wreaks widespread havoc even as it redefines the concept of justice—a relentlessly entertaining saga that delves deeply into matters at once ambiguous and essential.
While Gates Hunt chose to fight his abusive father head-on, his younger brother, Mason, eventually escaped their bitter, impoverished circumstances by earning a free ride to college and law school. And while Gates became an intransigent, compulsive felon, Mason met and married the love of his life, had a spitfire daughter, and returned to his rural hometown as the commonwealth’s attorney. But Mason’s idyll is abruptly pierced by a wicked tragedy, and soon afterward his life further unravels when Gates, convinced that his brother’s legal influence should spring him from prison, attempts to force his cooperation by means of a secret they’d both sworn to take with them to the grave. And with his closest friend and staunch ally suddenly threatened by secrets of his own, Mason ultimately finds himself facing complete ruin and desperately defending everything and everyone he holds dear.
Intricately plotted and shot through with authenticity, The Legal Limit is a roller coaster of moral relevance. What should govern our actions when family loyalty challenges personal integrity, when the letter of the law defies its spirit, and when fate plays dice with our best endeavors?
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| Customer Reviews: Read 22 more reviews...
A Morality Play About the Limits of Loyalty January 3, 2009 In 1984, Gates Hunt murdered a man in cold blood. His brother Mason helped him cover up the crime by providing an alibi and disposing of the murder weapon. Both brothers vowed to keep the secret...until one of them, motivated by greed, decided not to.
The Legal Limit is a moderately paced legal thriller about the ensuing blackmail. Gates becomes a prisoner while Mason becomes a lead prosecutor and Gates presents Mason with an ultimatum: help me get out of jail or I tell the police that you committed the 1984 murder. So, Mason can help his brother and betray the law, or be a 'straight shooter' while facing a murder indictment.
This book is equal parts a legal thriller and a character exploration. Earlier, I wrote that the book is 'moderately paced." Those wanting a real "page turner" may be disappointed with this book's first half, which follows the simulteneous rise of Mason Hunt and fall of his brother, Gates. Martin Clark does a great job in "setting the stage" by painting two very intriguing characters.
Even though the book may be slow-going for some, the patient will be amply rewarded by a chock-full-of-tension storyline that dominates the second half of the book. One of the most enjoyable, and tense, aspects of this book is the fact that there is no clear "right" or "wrong" side in it. While we can't help but feel sympathy for Mason Hunt, we are constantly reminded of his dilemma. If he helps his brother out of prison to save himself, he breaks the law. If he denies any involvement, he lies. If he admits involvement in covering up his brother's crime, he betrays his brother and opens himself up for possible imprisonment. Sometimes, "no win" situations are the most tense.
I reccomend this book to anyone who wants the not-so-typical legal thriller. This is far more "literary" and even philosophical than John Grisham, while containing all of the firey tension (albeit not at such a blistering pace). Very entertaining.
More Than A Legal thriller January 3, 2009 With his third, and best novel, The Legal Limit, Martin Clark presents not only a thoroughly engrossing legal thriller, but an engaging reflection on the effects our decisions have now and in years to come. Set in his native Stuart, a small town in South central Virginia, Mr. Clark's writing beautifully captures all the characteristics and nuances of the area and its people. The writing is crisp, humourous and detailed, and the characters are all wonderfully developed. Protagonist Mason Hunt has, with the protection of his older brother, and the love of his devoted mother, overcome an abusive father and hard scrabble upbringing to become a successful attorney. He returns triumphantly to his hometown from "big city" Richmond with his beautiful, artistic bride to be the local Commonwealth's Attorney. The bliss and serenity don't last, though, as a motor vehicle accident and a shooting from 20 years earlier by Mason's brother turn his world upside down. Mason's efforts to deal with his personal and family crises will not only keep you turning pages well into the night, but reflecting on the effects of our life choices and what is "justice." After you finish reading, there's a lot left to contemplate; this novel is more filling than the hearty fare Mason eats at the local diner. I have a quibble with part of the ending involving Mason's daughter, but other than that I found this book dead on perfect. Easily one of the best fiction works of 2008, in any category.
The Whole Package December 8, 2008 A book that really hits every note, and I have to say it's outstanding as a thriller/mystery/legal procedural, but its very literary, too, clever and well written, somewhere between Tom Perrotta and Ann Tyler, a study of family and family loyalty with a fun, accurate, sad and hilarious picture of husbands and wives tossed in the mix. Family bonds and ties versus the "law" and society's norms. There's a murder right off the bat, and one brother, Mason Hunt helps cover for his brother Gates. This becomes the tension in the book. I found myself absorbed in whatI would do myself versus what is "right" and what the characters do. Two scenes are classic: a fight between the brothers and a time when Gates' mother confronts him in jail. When I got to the end, after all the characters had made their decisions, I found myself considering what I would do, just like I did at the end of "The Road." One complaint: a bit wordy here and there, but nothing too bad. But overall, just great.
Hated It! December 6, 2008 The author did a good job with the characters, and did a great job in portraying an apparently real-life predicament. Notwithstanding the author's attempt to gloss over it in the final dozen or so pages of the book; this winds up being a story of a corrupt public official, and corrupt legal system. An interesting life lesson; a bad novel. Certainly not a "feel good" piece. Leaves me disappointed in the main character, and frustrated. Skip over this one.
Great insight into the quandries created in the criminal justice system. October 15, 2008 Judge Clarks new book delves into the the great quandry of our criminal justice system. What is "Justice" ?? The story of the Hunt brothers and their respective journeys through the system should make us all think of what happens when the law and what is right collide. Judge Clark uses his legal background to tell a powerful story of right and wrong and how the law is often unable to sort out the difference. The solution found by a small town judge leaves us satisfied but it does pose questions to think about for a long time.
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