A Woman's Place
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Average customer review:Product Description
San Francisco private eye Catherine Sayler and her partner, Jesse Price, are called in by a computer firm to investigate high-tech sexual harassment that soon turns deadly. By the author of Love Nor Money.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #5817138 in Books
- Published on: 1994-04
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 261 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Expertly accelerated tension holds the reader's attention as San Francisco PI Catherine Sayler confronts sexism--in the extreme--in the '90s workplace. Allen Leggett, CEO of Systech, a software development firm with sexual harassment problems, hires Catherine and Jesse, her (male) business partner, to find "one guy--and it has to be a salesman, not a programmer" to make an example of. Both enter the workplace as new employees. Jesse checks out the obscene e-mail messages on the computer system as Catherine searches for the harasser(s) among an assortment of gleefully sexist computer cowboys. She begins to suspect that more than crude jokes may be going on when Systech manager Sheila Wainwright hints that she is out for "bigger game" than a prankster and when Leggett stands by a smarmy v-p who dismisses photos of women being tortured as "boys-will-be-boys stuff"--right up to the sadistic murder of a female employee. By escalating from the everyday to the barely imaginable, Grant ( Love nor Money ) makes the most of her material, registering her points on issues while keeping entertainment the focus of her story.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
San Francisco private eye Catherine Sayler specializes in corporate security. Working undercover as a telecommunications expert with a prestigious banking software firm, Catherine hopes to find the source of sexually harassing E-mail, practical "jokes," and pornographic interoffice "memos." Tensions increase when murder strikes the office and all indications point to Catherine as the next victim. With the aid of her police detective ex-husband and her computer-whiz partner, Jesse, she redoubles her efforts to expose the vicious employee. Grant's breezy, relatively light-weight style and plucky heroine should interest undemanding readers.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Kirkus Reviews
Gone undercover on the track of a persistent sexual harasser threatening the few mid-level women at the computer firm Systech, San Francisco corporate-security specialist Catherine Sayler (Love Nor Money, 1991, etc.) soon finds that (1) anti-female sentiment at Systech goes a lot deeper than the resentments of KeeGo, the manly, higher-tech concern Systech's just gobbled up; (2) whoever is making the Systech wires hum with scary words and pictures is a genuine sicko who won't stop at murder; and (3) she's become the sicko's latest pin-up girl. Catherine fixes on abusive hunk Scott Jorgenson (VP/Sales) as the likely inside man in a robbery scheme she's gotten wind of, and a stakeout nets another thief who obligingly implicates Jorgenson, but is the inside man necessarily the killer? And when Jorgenson, out on bail, disappears from his boat, should Catherine be relieved or terrified? Genuinely sensitive on the ways ordinary sexist pranks foster the power of psychotic victimizers. Otherwise: minimal detection, illogical plotting, and a vanilla psycho as featureless as Catherine herself. -- Copyright ©1994, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
Customer Reviews
Educational AND interesting!
While a few years old now, A Womans Place is still a fascinating history of women in Australian politics. Inspirational and great to use for those pesky Government essays.
P.I. Catherine Sayler becomes the target of a serial killer.
Catherine and her partner Jesse are undercover at a hightech firm to discover who's responsible for the sexuallyharassing pranks. The pranks turn deadly soon enough, however, and Catherine must find a killer before he finds her. Fourth in the series and no slacking off. Author Linda Grant is very talented and a great observer of the San Francisco scene, especially as viewed by Sayler's teenage niece. This series only gets better, and the protagonist is on a par with all the other female "dicks" we have come to know and love.