Lady Justice and the Sixth Sense


Fiction - Mystery - General
240 Pages
Reviewed on 10/03/2017
Buy on Amazon

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Author Biography

Award-winning author, Robert Thornhill, began writing at the age of 66 after a 36 year career in real estate. In eight years, he has published 28 novels in the Lady Justice series, the seven volume Rainbow Road series of chapter books for children, a cookbook and a mini-autobiography.
Nine of the Lady Justice novels received the Pinnacle Achievement Award from the National Association of Book Entrepreneurs for best new mystery novel, sixteen have received 5 Star Reviews from Reader’s Favorite, and nineteen have been ranked #1 on Amazon in the past eighteen months
Many of Walt’s adventures in the Lady Justice series are anecdotal and based on Robert’s real life.
Although Robert holds a master’s in psychology, he has never taken a course in writing and has never learned to type. All 38 of his published books were typed with one finger and a thumb.
He lives with his wife, Peg, in Independence, Missouri.

    Book Review

Reviewed by Lee Ashford for Readers' Favorite

Lady Justice and the Sixth Sense by Robert Thornhill is as fresh as the daily news, and far more entertaining. The author has once again crafted a tale that is plausible, amusing and enjoyable, yet capable of spiking your blood pressure a few times. If Mr. Thornhill were writing just for me, personally, I can’t imagine how he could create anything I’d enjoy reading more than the stories in his Lady Justice series. In Lady Justice and the Sixth Sense, young Marty Singer suffers a minor mishap when a dog runs into the path of his bicycle, spilling Marty to the pavement. Helmet notwithstanding, Marty receives a bump on the head that has a rather unexpected result: for no apparent reason he starts seeing images in his head that seem to be a foretaste of events to come. Or, should I say, events that would have come about had lead character Walt Williams not intervened.

At various times throughout Lady Justice and the Sixth Sense, young Marty would make an off-hand comment that meant little to him, but which the adults around him perceived as holding a deeper meaning. The first time this happened, Walt acted on a hunch, with a most serendipitous ending. Thereafter, whenever Marty would “see” something, the grownups paid attention, contacting Walt with the information. Walt and his partner, Kevin, were able to use that information to either solve a problem, prevent a crime, or otherwise ensure that justice was served. Indeed, Marty’s “sixth sense” would have a significant impact on the entire country.

This story is fiction, but there is so much reality woven into all Robert Thornhill’s Lady Justice stories that it’s not hard to believe there is more truth than fiction hiding in the background. I highly recommend that everyone who enjoys mystery, humor, or just a good story, really should pick up any one of the episodes in the series. Lady Justice and the Sixth Sense would be a great one to start with!