Series: Book 4 in the Mickey Haller series
Rating: ****
Tags: EN-Thrillers, Lang:en
Summary
*Starred Review* Crime-fiction megastar Connelly can
always be counted on to try something a little different.
In The Reversal (2010), his last Mickey Haller novel,
starring the L.A. lawyer who prefers to work out of his
Lincoln Town Car, Connelly offered a tour de force of
plotting on multiple levels. Here, he narrows the focus
considerably, concentrating almost exclusively on what
happens inside the courtroom but bringing to the
traditional give-and-take of prosecutor, defender, judge,
and jury an altogether more complex commingling of
personality and legal strategy than is typically on view in
legal thrillers. He accomplishes this with a particularly
rich first-person narration in which Haller takes us
through the courtroom drama as it happens, noting his
blunders and praising himself for quick-thinking
improvisations. It doesn't hurt, either, that the plot is
meaty: a woman whom Haller was representing in a suit
against the bank attempting to foreclose on her mortgage is
accused of killing the bank official in charge of
foreclosures. Combining ripped-from-the-headlines
information on the mortgage crisis with a cast of
characters that defies stereotypes at every turn of the
plot, Connelly shows once again that he will never simply
ride the wave of past success. And, neither, apparently,
will Mickey Haller, as he reveals a shocking change of
direction in the novel's final pages. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Connelly's latest Mickey Haller
novel will benefit from the release in March of a movie
version of The Lincoln Lawyer, the first Haller novel,
starring Matthew McConaughey. 750,000 first printing.
--Bill OttFrom Publishers
Weekly
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