Hanging Time (April Woo Suspense Novels)
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Average customer review:Product Description
In an expensive boutique on New York's Upper West Side, a young salesgirl is persuaded to open the door to her death.
In the chaos of a police station, ambition and sexual politics raise the stakes of solving a vicious crime.
In his office, a famed psychoanalyst hears a sister's tale of emotional terrorism and madness.
For April Woo and Jason Frank, suspense fiction's most engrossing detective team, the clock is ticking on another brutal killing.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #309141 in Books
- Published on: 1996-10-02
- Released on: 1996-09-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 444 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Detective April Woo and psychoanalyst Jason Frank team up again in Glass's second mystery.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
The solution to a series of murders lies in the complex relationship of abuse and dependency between two sisters, one of whom is a patient of psychiatrist Jason Frank. Although his involvement in this case is less active than in the series' debut, Burning Time (Doubleday, 1993), Jason's insights help detective April Woo arrive at the murderer's identity. What separates Glass's novels from many suspense tales is her exploration of Frank's and Woo's professional and personal lives. Frank's wife has left to pursue a film career, and he compensates for loneliness by devoting himself to his patients. April copes with departmental in-fighting that jeopardizes the case while preparing for the sergeant's exam. Less violent than Burning Time, this novel engages readers through complex insights into those handling the case. Deft plotting and strong characterization will leave readers eager for further installments. For most public libraries.
Kathy Piehl, Mankato State Univ., Minn.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From the Publisher
"Sharp as a scalpel...scary as hell. Leslie Glass is Lady McBain." --Michael Palmer, author of Critical Judgment
"Gripping psychological drama...there's no straight path to the truth wehen information is manipulated and withheld on all sides." --Publishers Weekly
Customer Reviews
April Woo is no Charlie Chan!
April Woo is the best fictional female cop of them all! Leslie Glass has brought us a deeply human, yet fascinatingly inscrutable heroine in Hanging Time. Where Burning Time was brooding and macbre, Hanging Time weaves a perplexing and compelling story that doesn't disappoint on any level. Not a purists' police procedural nor an overly sensational crime thriller, Hanging Time gradually feeds out a little more about each character and their lives from the last book.
Mystery fiction can so easily resort to cliched characters and tired crime plots, but Ms Glass has brought to life a group of characters who, although intertwined, are uniquely independent and involving.
April Woo, a strong determined detective, struggles with her cultural conflicts and domineering mother. Her Mexican partner is a possible love interest, but not obviously so and not in this book, thank you.
Jason Frank, unlike Jonathon Kellerman's shrink, is an unwilling partner in investigations but his weaknesses are touchingly human. His life is far from ideal and his insight is not used as some super-human knowledge as psychiatric professionals are sometimes used.
This series of novels is the best I've found since getting hooked on John Sanford's Davenport. Linda Glass is able to portray her people as normal humans with all the ambivilence and insight that real people experience without beating a concept to death. Gimme more...
One of the better Aprl Woo mysteries- 2nd in the series
April Woo, a Chinese-American police detective is a fascinating character who grows and evolves throughout the books in the series. It's a nice change of pace to read a mystery series in which the characters do not simply remain static, but rather have all the dynamics of real people who experience intense situations and are changed by them as a result. Ms. Glass' characterization is superb. You see the main characters as real people because they have depth. You get to know their quirks, foibles, and motivations.
April's ambivalence between her duty as a cop and the demands of her over-bearing and very "old-country" Mother are intriguing. While you empathize with April's exasperation toward her Mother, the exchanges between them are hilarious. Therefore, you don't feel annoyed or worn out from their clashes. You're simply left smiling and realizing your own Mom isn't so bad after all!
The other 2 lead characters are also realistically drawn. Psychiatrist Jason Frank, M.D. is highly intelligent, yet his life is far from perfect. He & his somewhat self-centered (and occasionally pouty) struggling-actress wife, Emma, are opposites. This results in mild arguments and even a brief estrangement in this book. Jason is very likeable, but is self-centered in his own way. Not a shallow, superficial way like
Emma, but rather in that he is so conscientious that his medical career and patients come not only before his own needs, but also before that of Emma's. And despite being a Psychiatrist, Jason does not seem entirely well-adjusted. His big quirk is his huge antique clock collection driven by his obsession with time, hence the title of the books. Albeit, given that his patients are allotted one hour time slots & therefore he does not have the "luxury" of running late like most physicians, his obsession is understandable.
Detective Mike Sanchez is also nicely developed over the course of the first few books. Sanchez is a possible love interest for April. It's very believable because Glass develops the prospective romance slowly. It is a book that should still appeal to men because the romance is not cheesy or predominant. Unlike some books, which are primarily romance but are disguised at thrillers/mysteries (i.e. Sandra Brown, whom I like, but only in small doses because she is rather formula-like) or those which are equal parts mystery & romance (i.e. Linda Howard, whose book "Mr. Perfect" was exceptional but was definitely geared to the female reader).
I have read the first 3 April Woo books and am almost done with the 4th and so far April Woo hasn't "hit the sheets with anyone" but given Ms. Glass' style, I'm sure it will be tastefully done. I seriously doubt that Glass would resort to the smarmy, overused phrases and graphic style found in those steamy, yet cheesy, formula romance books. Her writing is very real -- not "over-the-top".
"Hanging Time" was not quite as good as "Burning Time" (the first book in the series), however it is less graphic/gory. If you find books like Thomas Harris' "Silence of the Lambs" and James Patterson's "Kiss the Girls" too disturbing you should probably pass on "Burning Time", however you should be able to handle "Hanging Time" unless you have a very weak stomach. (In which case you should try Mary Higgins Clark's mysteries. If those are still too intense for you, mystery is probably not your genre!)
Although the mystery is fairly easy to figure out, the book is still very entertaining and superior to most detective novels.
Excellent on characterization, poor on forensics
I read a lot of crime - mystery thriller fiction. I found
"Burning time" much more graphic than "Hanging Time." I especially liked these two in the April Woo series for their characterization. However, the latter was poor in forensic analysis. It was really 50 - 50 who the villain turned out to be and went on very repetitiously. Still a unique series and worth reading.




