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The Out-of-Town Lawyer

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

USA Today bestselling author Robert Rotstein is back with The Out-of-Town Lawyer, a gripping legal thriller that throws a community into chaos and questions the very foundations of our morality.

The Quartz County, Alabama, district attorney has charged Destiny Grace Harper with murdering her unborn twins—a crime punishable by death. However, Alabama v. Harper isn't your ordinary homicide case. Harper's babies suffered from a rare disorder called TTTS, a fatal condition if left untreated, but correctable with minimally invasive surgery. Harper refused the surgery on religious grounds, resulting in the death of both babies, and now Harper is on trial.

Enter Elvis Henderson, a traveling criminal defense attorney who roams the country in his campervan. He receives assignments from Hazel Curnow, a once iconic trial lawyer turned recluse. When Curnow assigns Elvis the Harper case, he balks—Quartz County is his home turf. He left Alabama under a dark cloud at age eighteen and has no intention of returning.

When Elvis arrives to meet his paralegal, Margaret Booth, they immediately realize the case is fraught with complications: a desperate client whose story keeps shifting; a local populace who vociferously defend the rights of the unborn; a charismatic minister whose family lords over the town; a ruthless DA with political ambitions; an old-school judge who relishes handing down capital convictions; and a sheriff who might just want Elvis dead.

An action-packed ride to a shocking verdict, The Out-of-Town Lawyer is a gripping legal thriller that explores family love, reconciliation, and the moral and legal issues that draw a fine line between tragedy and crime.

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    • Kirkus

      May 15, 2024
      An attorney returns to his hometown of Cole's Crossing, Alabama, on behalf of a client who looks as if she hasn't got a prayer of acquittal. Destiny Grace Harper was pregnant with daughters afflicted by rare twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome that condemned them to likely death unless their mother underwent fetoscopic laser surgery, a procedure she rejected at the behest of Rev. Jeremiah Tipple, the pastor of the Church of Our Lord's Rapture. Now that she's fled her home and delivered two babies, one stillborn, the other dead within minutes, the state of Alabama has put her on trial for capital murder. Her mother, LeAnn Harper, whom the good pastor excommunicated after her cancer surgery, offers little help beyond urging her to replace public defender Aruna Patel Higgins with someone more effective; Rev. Tipple refuses to testify about Destiny's motives; and Judge Merle Barraclough purges the jury pool of anyone who supports abortion. So Elvis Henderson, the former local boy turned attorney whose boss in Laredo takes on the case pro bono, has his work cut out for him. "My client is being tried for felony pregnancy," he maintains, and it would be hard to disagree with him in a more sympathetic venue. As the story unfolds, Elvis' attempt to prove that his client acted out of religious convictions that no one close to her is willing to document gets increasingly tangled with his own checkered past in Cole's Crossing, a past that's won him more than his share of enemies. Even though the case revolves around whydunit, not whodunit, Rotstein does an admirable job keeping up the tension en route to a series of surprising surprises. A highly original courtroom drama ripped from the headlines and then some.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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