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Blood Brothers

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

". . . . . a gripping courtroom drama, and an ironic meditation on the relationship between truth and myth. Absorbing from first page to last"

"It's a stunning piece of legal razzle-dazzle that will keep the reader guessing to the last page. . . . You will not be able to put it down"---Priscilla Buckley, Author of A String of Pearls and former Managing Editor of The National Review.

"Sol Wachtler and David Gould have written an important, thought-provoking mystery that will put them on the bestseller list in the company of John Grisham and Scott Turow. Blood Brothers is superbly crafted and is certainly one of this year's finest novels. "

"Legal thriller will find the insider courtroom information fascinating and the story engrossing. . . "

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 22, 2003
      The jury verdict is the usual culmination of most legal thrillers; not so in this absorbing, thoughtful deliberation from Wachtler (After the Madness: A Judge's Own Prison Memoir), a former chief judge of New York State, and Gould, a former assistant United States attorney. In late 1950s Augusta, Ga., 15-year-old Luke Lipton befriends sullen, hulking T.C. Simmons. As one of the town's few Jewish teens, Luke feels an outcast kinship with alienated, dirt-poor T.C. Forty years later, Luke has become an exalted Wall Street lawyer, and T.C. has done jail time for torching a synagogue. When Luke learns that T.C. has been accused of the brutal killing of a black man, Aaron Boddie, he quits his job and returns to Georgia to defend his old friend. Everyone is intent on getting the death penalty for T.C., including Mayor Will Morgan, who testifies he saw T.C. commit the crime, though T.C. swears it was Will who dragged Boddie into a swamp and set him on fire. Luke's faith in his friend wavers, is restored and dashed again as the twisted story is retold both in court and out. But the authors are concerned more with questions of truth, myth and justice than with a simple solution to the crime, and after the verdict is delivered, it is personal morality that goes on trial, with Luke forced to make an almost impossible decision that will drastically change the lives of everyone concerned. Many readers, after becoming increasingly invested in this cast of compelling characters, will be frustrated at the authors' open-ended conclusion, while others will find the ambiguity bold and thought provoking. (Sept.)Forecast:Legal thriller readers will find the insider courtroom information fascinating and the story engrossing (and may be intrigued by Wachtler's tabloid past—he was arrested in 1992 for harassing former lover Joy Silverman), but the problematic ending may keep this one from scoring big. The publishing company is betting otherwise with a hefty first printing and fulsome author endorsements by Richard North Patterson, Nelson DeMille and that jacket perennial, Larry King.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Because of its multiple scenarios, swings in mood, and unique characters, this legal thriller requires a narrator who can rapidly switch gears. Dan Cashman fits the bill. Though the main plot of the story is somewhat farfetched, the subplots hold listener interest. A New York Jewish lawyer returns to the South of his boyhood to defend a childhood friend and Klan member on a forty-year-old murder charge. Cashman is best in court when he's called upon to switch from defense counsel, to prosecutor, to witness, then judge--and back to defense lawyer again. As the trial kicks into overdrive--so does Cashman. A.L.H. (c) AudioFile 2004, Portland, Maine

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  • English

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