The Devil’s Advocate (Orion,
2021) is the sixth book about defense attorney Eddie Flynn. Created by Irish
lawyer Steve
Cavanagh, Flynn is a former grifter who learned
the trade from his father. He abandoned a lucrative life running scams to
attend law school and lead a socially acceptable life. A hair-raising encounter
with the Russian mafia, related in The Defense (Flatiron Books, 2016),
forced him to resurrect his swindler’s tricks and to call on his not altogether
honest friends and they have been part of his legal arsenal ever since.
Flynn needs
all the help he can get when Alexander Berlin, a high-level U.S. government
troubleshooter, approaches him about representing a young man on trial for
murder in Sunville County, Alabama. The district attorney there, Randall Korn, is
known for requesting the death penalty whenever he can and getting it. His
death row statistics are completely out of line with the rural county’s
population and are among the highest in the nation. This discrepancy has been
noted by the Justice Department and others but so far Korn has skillfully
covered his tracks and no overt reason for challenging him presents itself.
Berlin hired a lawyer to represent Korn’s latest target and he has disappeared.
Berlin thinks he’s been killed and he wants Flynn to take his place, believing
Flynn can outwit the underhanded local machinery in Buckstown.
Flynn has an
uphill battle. The local hotels won’t rent a room to him and his sidekick
retired New York justice Harry Ford, the restaurants won’t serve them. His
vehicle tires are slashed, critical evidence that supports the defense is
missing, the county sheriff refuses to allow him to see his client. When Flynn
does manage to talk to him by getting arrested himself, he learns the sheriff
has threatened to hurt the young man’s mother if he talks to Flynn. Civil
rights violations abound and Flynn and Ford are in imminent danger. Flynn quite
reasonably fears his client may be killed in his cell in a faked suicide.
I tore
through this compulsively readable book in about six hours, staying up well
into the night. Darker than many legal thrillers, this story has strong
overtones of To Kill a Mockingbird but the people here are frighteningly
malevolent instead of ignorant. Cavanagh works small town character and U. S.
contemporary race issues into a scary and heart-pounding legal thriller that
demonstrates clearly just how deeply the justice system can be compromised. Finalist 2022
Steel Dagger Award.
·
Hardcover: 403 pages
·
Publisher: Orion Books, 2021
·
Language: English
·
ISBN-10: 1398700177
·
ISBN-13: 978-1398700178
Aubrey
Nye Hamilton ©2023
Aubrey
Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and
reads mysteries at night.
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