From 2000 to
2017, Beverley McLachlin was Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada. She
is the first woman to hold that position and the longest-serving Chief Justice
in Canadian history. McLachlin is also the author of three legal thrillers
about Vancouver defense attorney Jilly Truitt and a memoir, Truth Be Told,
which won the prestigious Writers’ Trust Shaughnessy Cohen Prize for Political
Writing and the Ottawa Book Award for Nonfiction. In 2018, McLachlin became a
Companion of the Order of Canada, the highest honor within the Order.
In Denial (Simon &
Schuster, 2021) the second book about Jilly Truitt, Jilly has finally reached
the point in her legal practice that she does not have to take every case that
comes along to keep the lights on. She can pick and choose and she tends to take
only those cases that she knows she can win. So when Joseph Quentin asks her to
defend his wife Vera, who has been accused of killing her very ill mother,
Jilly’s instincts are to say no. Vera was alone in the house with her mother
the night she died and there doesn’t seem to be any question about who
administered the lethal dose of morphine. Quentin is a lawyer himself and well
known as a fixer of all kinds of problems. If he can’t persuade his wife to
take a plea deal, after two other lawyers have resigned in frustration, Jilly
doesn’t know that she can help, but Quentin pressures her and she agrees to
meet with Vera.
Vera
convinces Jilly that she did not kill her mother, despite all the evidence
against her, and Jilly agrees to take the case. The judge will not allow
further delays in the trial process and Jilly has only three weeks to prepare a
defense so she calls in an investigator and they go into overdrive. Jilly looks
at the victim’s will which seems straightforward until she learns that a lawyer
had visited her on her last day alive and no one knows why. Then she discovers a
few holes in the police investigation which introduce an element of doubt. It
was still a thin case and the prosecutor is a formidable courtroom presence who
plays every trick in the legal book.
The Canadian
court system is more similar to that of the U.S. than the English one so the
process described here is not as difficult to follow as some of the English
legal thrillers are. The forceful courtroom dialog could only be written by a
subject matter expert. Jilly is a likable and sharp-witted protagonist, and her
supportive staff make a good foil for her foibles. A human trafficking subplot
is worked smoothly and all too credibly into the larger story. Fans of legal
thrillers will want to add these books to their TBR lists.
·
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
(September 14, 2021)
·
Language: English
·
Paperback: 384 pages
·
ISBN-10: 1982104996
· ISBN-13: 978-1982104993
Amazon Associate
Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/3DukEFa
Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2025
Aubrey Hamilton is a
former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at
night.


No comments:
Post a Comment