A stay of execution and the race to find new evidence exonerating the wrongly convicted
I thoroughly enjoyed the audiobook The Guardians by John Grisham, and wish it could become a series, as the dedicated employees of Guardian Ministries are so memorable, it would be a shame to squander such a good ensemble cast on only one novel! I’m partial to legal/murder thrillers that take place in Florida, especially in the “Body Heat” tradition, which may involve flashbacks of steamy summer days, good old boys doing deals and obstructing justice, bars, diners, ice cubes tinkling in glasses of whisky, drug cartels, and a kind of legal insouciance that seems to permeate Florida’s legal history where powerful forces controlled courtroom drama, tipping the scales of justice to suit them, tragically railroading innocents in the process. There is one scene involving crocodiles and zip lines, an unforgettable illustration of the drug trade’s savage moral bankruptcy. I loved the hungry and exhausted lawyer/minister Cullen Post commenting, “Dinner is machine food, which is seriously underrated.” A telltale sign of a workaholic on a mission of justice, who wouldn’t have it any other way. The book gives a good inside look at the trials and tribulations of innocence project type work, within the confines of a system ruled by prosecutors, and judges who were prosecutors, battling to maintain their status quo, even at the expense of justice. Narrator Michael Beck is marvelous.
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