Let Him Have Judgment
Condition: SECONDHAND
This is a secondhand book. The jacket image is a photograph of the exact copy we have in stock. This image shows the condition of this book. Further condition remarks are below.
Condition remarks:
Condition: Good. Jacket: Worn/faded, with chipping and wear along the edges and spine. Page Condition: Likely yellowed given age. Markings: markings on fep. Binding: Appears intact as a hardcover.
A gripping work of British crime fiction, Let Him Have Judgment by Bruce Hamilton delivers a taut, atmospheric thriller rooted in the moral complexities of justice and guilt. Hamilton, best known as the brother of Patrick Hamilton and a gifted crime writer in his own right, crafts a narrative that probes the machinery of the law and the darker corners of human nature. The story uncovers the tensions between legal procedure and personal vengeance, presenting a cast of morally ambiguous characters caught in a web of consequence and culpability. Written with the measured intelligence and dry wit characteristic of mid-century British crime fiction, it stands as a compelling and underappreciated entry in the genre.
Author: Bruce Hamilton
Format: Hardback
Published: 1970, Howard Baker Publishers
Genre: Crime fiction
Condition remarks:
Condition: Good. Jacket: Worn/faded, with chipping and wear along the edges and spine. Page Condition: Likely yellowed given age. Markings: markings on fep. Binding: Appears intact as a hardcover.
A gripping work of British crime fiction, Let Him Have Judgment by Bruce Hamilton delivers a taut, atmospheric thriller rooted in the moral complexities of justice and guilt. Hamilton, best known as the brother of Patrick Hamilton and a gifted crime writer in his own right, crafts a narrative that probes the machinery of the law and the darker corners of human nature. The story uncovers the tensions between legal procedure and personal vengeance, presenting a cast of morally ambiguous characters caught in a web of consequence and culpability. Written with the measured intelligence and dry wit characteristic of mid-century British crime fiction, it stands as a compelling and underappreciated entry in the genre.