In the Shadow of the Law FROM THE PUBLISHER
Morgan Siler is one of Washington, D.C.'s most powerful K Street law firms, its roster of clients stocked with multi-billion-dollar corporations. Through the obsessive efforts of its founder's son, Peter Morgan, his father's old-fashioned business has been transformed into a veritable goliath, embracing bankruptcy and merger divisions that Archibald Morgan had deemed ungentlemanly. As Peter reaches the pinnacle of his career, his firm is embroiled in two difficult cases: a pro bono death-penalty case in Virginia, and a class-action lawsuit brought against Hubble Chemical of Texas after an on-site explosion killed dozens of workers.
Assigned to these cases is a group of young associates and seasoned partners struggling to make their way in the firm. Mark Clayton, fresh out of law school, is beginning to loathe his dull workload, and to be frightened by the downgrading of his personal life, when he is assigned to the pro bono case. Assisting him is the mercurial Walker Eliot, a brilliant third-year associate whose passion for the law is as great as his skill at unraveling its intricacies. The aggressive, profane, and wildly successful litigator Harold Fineman is leading the Hubble defense, assisted by first-year Katja Phillips, whose twin devotion to productivity and idealism intrigue him, and Ryan Grady, another first-year, whose quest to pick up girls is starting to interfere with his work.
In this complex, ambitious, and gripping first novel, Kermit Roosevelt vividly illustrates the subtle and stark effects of the law on the lives not only of a group of lawyers, but also on communities and private citizens. In the Shadow of the Law is a meditation about thelife of the law, the organism that is a law firm, and its impact on those who come within its powerful orbit.
FROM THE CRITICS
Library Journal
The powerhouse Washington, DC, law firm of Morgan Siler is so driven by the quest for "billable hours" that its head partner advises a young lawyer to bill the time he spends in the men's room because he's "thinking" about work. Both a legal thriller and a first-rate legal comedy of manners, this debut by a University of Pennsylvania law professor adeptly weaves together two complicated legal cases-a pro bono appeal of a death sentence and the defense of a manufacturing conglomerate accused of negligence in the death of several workers-with satisfying insider details to give readers a full sense of what life in such an environment is like. The ending suffers owing to stretched coincidences and a too-neat resolution, but these are small flaws in an otherwise superior novel; comparison with Scott Turow (Presumed Innocent) is inevitable. Recommended for most popular fiction collections. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 2/15/05.]-David Keymer, Modesto, CA Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.