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Produktbild: The Holdout

The Holdout A Novel

3

16,50 €

inkl. gesetzl. MwSt.

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Format

ePUB 3

Kopierschutz

Ja

Family Sharing

Ja

Text-to-Speech

Ja

Erscheinungsdatum

18.02.2020

Verlag

Random House Publishing Group

Seitenzahl

336 (Printausgabe)

Dateigröße

2485 KB

Sprache

Englisch

EAN

9780399591785

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Format

ePUB 3

eBooks im ePUB 3-Format erlauben eine dynamische Anpassung des Inhalts an die jeweilige Display-Größe des Lesegeräts. Das Format eignet sich daher besonders für das Lesen auf mobilen Geräten, wie z.B. Ihrem tolino, Tablets oder Smartphones.

Kopierschutz

Ja

Zum Lesen dieses eBooks auf Geräten der tolino Familie sowie auf sonstigen eReadern und am PC benötigen Sie eine Adobe ID. Weitere Hinweise zum Lesen von kopiergeschützten eBooks finden Sie unter Hilfe/Downloads.

Family Sharing

Ja

Mit Family Sharing können Sie eBooks innerhalb Ihrer Familie (max. sechs Mitglieder im gleichen Haushalt) teilen. Sie entscheiden selbst, welches Buch Sie mit welchem Familienmitglied teilen möchten. Auch das parallele Lesen durch verschiedene Familienmitglieder ist durch Family Sharing möglich. Um eBooks zu teilen oder geteilt zu bekommen, muss jedes Familienmitglied ein Konto bei Thalia oder einem anderen tolino-Buchhändler haben. Weitere Informationen finden Sie unter Hilfe/Family-Sharing.

Text-to-Speech

Ja

Bedeutet Ihnen Stimme mehr als Text? Mit der Funktion Text-to-Speech können Sie sich im tolino webReader und in der aktuellen Thalia – Lesen & Hören App das eBook vorlesen lassen. Weitere Informationen finden Sie unter Hilfe/Text-to-Speech.

Barrierefreiheit

  • navigierbares Inhaltsverzeichnis
  • alle Texte können angepasst werden
  • hoher Kontrast zwischen Text und Hintergrund
  • Inhalt auch ohne Farbwahrnehmung verständlich dargestellt
  • ARIA-Rollen vorhanden
  • Landmark-Navigation vorhanden

Erscheinungsdatum

18.02.2020

Verlag

Random House Publishing Group

Seitenzahl

336 (Printausgabe)

Dateigröße

2485 KB

Sprache

Englisch

EAN

9780399591785

Kundinnen und Kunden meinen

3 Bewertungen

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Graham Moore - The Holdout

Miss.mesmerized am 10.02.2021

Bewertungsnummer: 1438852

Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)

A reunion they have never really wanted since all of them only wanted to forget what happened ten years ago. When lawyer Maya Seale is first approached by Rick, she refuses, but her boss convinces her to take part. They were the jury on the most popular case of the time: 15-year-old Jessica had vanished and was supposedly murdered by her teacher Bobby Nock with whom she obviously had had an affair. Even though the body had never been found, the whole country was convinced that the black man had killed the daughter of a rich Californian real estate mogul. However, the jurors followed Maya’s arguing in finding Bobby not guilty. It took Rick, one of the jurors, a decade of his life to investigate privately and now, he has come up with new evidence he wants his co-jurors and the whole world to see. They return to the hotel where they were kept away from the public for months, but then, Rick is found dead – in Maya’s room. All is just too obvious: the one person who is responsible for the killer of a young girl running free now wants to protect herself by keeping the evidence secret. Thus, consequently, Maya is arrested. The reader follows Maya Seale in her quest to prove her innocence. You know from the beginning that she is not a reckless killer and that she’s got nothing to hide, but much more interestingly than this already answered question is the one about the legal system: Maya’s chances of being acquitted from murder rise tremendously if she pleads guilty of manslaughter – there does not seem to be a chance of just telling the truth and it simply being acknowledged. So the interesting question actually is: how does the truth have to be framed, or to put it more explicitly: manipulated, to get the result you want? Graham Moore’s “The Holdout” is a real page-turner. Once you have started, you cannot simply put the novel aside. It is fascinating to see how the law works, to follow the arguing of the lawyers and their weighing the different versions of truth. I also liked how the author created a jury of very peculiar individuals who all have their small secrets they want to hide. Yet, ultimately, they all come out, some with more, others with less consequences. The big mystery looming over the whole story is who killed Jessica Silver and why. This is very cleverly solved but also challenges the reader’s moral value system. At the end of the day, life is complicated and, at times, you have to weigh different perspectives against each other and you may come to the conclusion that one version of truth might be better than another. A gripping legal thriller full of suspense and a lot of food for thought.

Graham Moore - The Holdout

Miss.mesmerized am 10.02.2021
Bewertungsnummer: 1438852
Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)

A reunion they have never really wanted since all of them only wanted to forget what happened ten years ago. When lawyer Maya Seale is first approached by Rick, she refuses, but her boss convinces her to take part. They were the jury on the most popular case of the time: 15-year-old Jessica had vanished and was supposedly murdered by her teacher Bobby Nock with whom she obviously had had an affair. Even though the body had never been found, the whole country was convinced that the black man had killed the daughter of a rich Californian real estate mogul. However, the jurors followed Maya’s arguing in finding Bobby not guilty. It took Rick, one of the jurors, a decade of his life to investigate privately and now, he has come up with new evidence he wants his co-jurors and the whole world to see. They return to the hotel where they were kept away from the public for months, but then, Rick is found dead – in Maya’s room. All is just too obvious: the one person who is responsible for the killer of a young girl running free now wants to protect herself by keeping the evidence secret. Thus, consequently, Maya is arrested. The reader follows Maya Seale in her quest to prove her innocence. You know from the beginning that she is not a reckless killer and that she’s got nothing to hide, but much more interestingly than this already answered question is the one about the legal system: Maya’s chances of being acquitted from murder rise tremendously if she pleads guilty of manslaughter – there does not seem to be a chance of just telling the truth and it simply being acknowledged. So the interesting question actually is: how does the truth have to be framed, or to put it more explicitly: manipulated, to get the result you want? Graham Moore’s “The Holdout” is a real page-turner. Once you have started, you cannot simply put the novel aside. It is fascinating to see how the law works, to follow the arguing of the lawyers and their weighing the different versions of truth. I also liked how the author created a jury of very peculiar individuals who all have their small secrets they want to hide. Yet, ultimately, they all come out, some with more, others with less consequences. The big mystery looming over the whole story is who killed Jessica Silver and why. This is very cleverly solved but also challenges the reader’s moral value system. At the end of the day, life is complicated and, at times, you have to weigh different perspectives against each other and you may come to the conclusion that one version of truth might be better than another. A gripping legal thriller full of suspense and a lot of food for thought.

A reunion they have never…

Bewertung aus Mainz am 09.02.2021

Bewertungsnummer: 2995238

Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)

A reunion they have never really wanted since all of them only wanted to forget what happened ten years ago. When lawyer Maya Seale is first approached by Rick, she refuses, but her boss convinces her to take part. They were the jury on the most popular case of the time: 15-year-old Jessica had vanished and was supposedly murdered by her teacher Bobby Nock with whom she obviously had had an affair. Even though the body had never been found, the whole country was convinced that the black man had killed the daughter of a rich Californian real estate mogul. However, the jurors followed Maya’s arguing in finding Bobby not guilty. It took Rick, one of the jurors, a decade of his life to investigate privately and now, he has come up with new evidence he wants his co-jurors and the whole world to see. They return to the hotel where they were kept away from the public for months, but then, Rick is found dead – in Maya’s room. All is just too obvious: the one person who is responsible for the killer of a young girl running free now wants to protect herself by keeping the evidence secret. Thus, consequently, Maya is arrested. The reader follows Maya Seale in her quest to prove her innocence. You know from the beginning that she is not a reckless killer and that she’s got nothing to hide, but much more interestingly than this already answered question is the one about the legal system: Maya’s chances of being acquitted from murder rise tremendously if she pleads guilty of manslaughter – there does not seem to be a chance of just telling the truth and it simply being acknowledged. So the interesting question actually is: how does the truth have to be framed, or to put it more explicitly: manipulated, to get the result you want? Graham Moore’s “The Holdout” is a real page-turner. Once you have started, you cannot simply put the novel aside. It is fascinating to see how the law works, to follow the arguing of the lawyers and their weighing the different versions of truth. I also liked how the author created a jury of very peculiar individuals who all have their small secrets they want to hide. Yet, ultimately, they all come out, some with more, others with less consequences. The big mystery looming over the whole story is who killed Jessica Silver and why. This is very cleverly solved but also challenges the reader’s moral value system. At the end of the day, life is complicated and, at times, you have to weigh different perspectives against each other and you may come to the conclusion that one version of truth might be better than another. A gripping legal thriller full of suspense and a lot of food for thought.

A reunion they have never…

Bewertung aus Mainz am 09.02.2021
Bewertungsnummer: 2995238
Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)

A reunion they have never really wanted since all of them only wanted to forget what happened ten years ago. When lawyer Maya Seale is first approached by Rick, she refuses, but her boss convinces her to take part. They were the jury on the most popular case of the time: 15-year-old Jessica had vanished and was supposedly murdered by her teacher Bobby Nock with whom she obviously had had an affair. Even though the body had never been found, the whole country was convinced that the black man had killed the daughter of a rich Californian real estate mogul. However, the jurors followed Maya’s arguing in finding Bobby not guilty. It took Rick, one of the jurors, a decade of his life to investigate privately and now, he has come up with new evidence he wants his co-jurors and the whole world to see. They return to the hotel where they were kept away from the public for months, but then, Rick is found dead – in Maya’s room. All is just too obvious: the one person who is responsible for the killer of a young girl running free now wants to protect herself by keeping the evidence secret. Thus, consequently, Maya is arrested. The reader follows Maya Seale in her quest to prove her innocence. You know from the beginning that she is not a reckless killer and that she’s got nothing to hide, but much more interestingly than this already answered question is the one about the legal system: Maya’s chances of being acquitted from murder rise tremendously if she pleads guilty of manslaughter – there does not seem to be a chance of just telling the truth and it simply being acknowledged. So the interesting question actually is: how does the truth have to be framed, or to put it more explicitly: manipulated, to get the result you want? Graham Moore’s “The Holdout” is a real page-turner. Once you have started, you cannot simply put the novel aside. It is fascinating to see how the law works, to follow the arguing of the lawyers and their weighing the different versions of truth. I also liked how the author created a jury of very peculiar individuals who all have their small secrets they want to hide. Yet, ultimately, they all come out, some with more, others with less consequences. The big mystery looming over the whole story is who killed Jessica Silver and why. This is very cleverly solved but also challenges the reader’s moral value system. At the end of the day, life is complicated and, at times, you have to weigh different perspectives against each other and you may come to the conclusion that one version of truth might be better than another. A gripping legal thriller full of suspense and a lot of food for thought.

Kundinnen und Kunden meinen

The Holdout

von Graham Moore

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  • Produktbild: The Holdout