LOW FLAT RATE $9.90 AUST-WIDE DELIVERY

Close Notification

Your cart does not contain any items

Private Screening

Richard North Patterson

$25

Paperback

Not in-store but you can order this
How long will it take?

QTY:

English
Arrow Books Ltd
06 September 1994
The nation is stunned silent when presidential hopeful James Kilcannon is shot dead point blank, while sharing the stage at a benefit concert with his rock star girlfriend Stacy Tarrant. Fiercely independent attorney Tony Lord defends the assassin in a sensational trial that erupts in to the media event of the decade. But the most shocking gambit ever witnessed in the history of television has yet to unfold. As America watches, a mysterious and ruthless figure known only as Phoenix takes to the airwaves in the ultimate act of high-tech terror. Holding the wife of a wealthy newspaper mogul and Stacy's manager hostage, Phoenix mounts a televised trial of his own - in which Stacy Tarrant and Tony Lord are the helpless defendants, millions of viewers are jurors, and - unless his chilling demands are met - Phoenix is the unstoppable executioner. . .
By:  
Imprint:   Arrow Books Ltd
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 178mm,  Width: 110mm,  Spine: 26mm
Weight:   238g
ISBN:   9780099374015
ISBN 10:   0099374013
Pages:   448
Publication Date:  
Recommended Age:   From 0 years
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Richard North Patterson has written a number of novels including the international bestsellers, Degree of Guilt, Eyes of a Child, The Final Judgement, Silent Witness, No Safe Place, Dark Lady and Protect and Defend. His novels have won the Edgar Allan Poe Award and the Grand Prix de Litterature Polici re. He and his wife, Laurie, live with their family in San Francisco and on Martha's Vineyard.

Reviews for Private Screening

Patterson, whose most recent thriller was Escape The Night (1983), checks in this time with the turgid and contrived tale of a terrorist who kidnaps a wealthy woman and threatens to execute her live on cable television. Private Screening is really two different stories jury-rigged together. The first deals with rock-star Stacy Tarrant and her lover, the Kennedy-esque Presidential candidate, Senator James Kilcannon. Kilcannon is assassinated at a concert that Stacy gives to raise funds for the campaign; his killer is Harry Carson, a Vietnam vet who claims to have been suffering from flashbacks at the time of the murder. At his trial, Carson is represented by tough-guy defender of the downtrodden, Tony Lord, who, much to Stacy's consternation, manages to get him off on an insanity plea. The second story begins a year later. A hooded terrorist kidnaps John Damone, Stacy's longtime personal manager, and Alexis Parnell, wife of wealthy newspaper magnate, Colby Parnell. The terrorist, who calls himself, with stunning originality, Phoenix ( It's a mythic bird, Lord helpfully explains for those not in the know), threatens to kill both of them up close and personal on television if Stacy doesn't give a concert to raise five million for the poor, and if poor, rich Colby doesn't confess his capitalist sins in front of the world. Implausibly enough, Stacy hires Lord to advise her, and he tracks down Phoenix. Phoenix, it turns out, is really John Damone - he'd put Carson up to killing Kilcannon so he, Damone, could rip off the concert funds in the confusion and use them to finance his kidnapping of Alexis. Why kidnap Alexis? Because John Damone is really Robert Parnell, the weird, Oedipus-driven son of Alexis and Colby who had disappeared way back in 1968. Anyway, Phoenix/Damone/Robert kills Alexis and is himself killed, on his way to the police station, by his father. Who then commits suicide. Loony Vietnam vets, televised kidnappings, a rock star who could be a clone of Linda Ronstadt: Patterson throws a lot of darts at the old bestseller bulls-eye, but keeps missing by miles. (Kirkus Reviews)


See Also