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Falls the Shadow by William Lashner — book cover

Falls the Shadow

by William Lashner
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Overview

New York Times bestselling author William Lashner returns with a brilliantly twisty tale that probes the dark side of the law — and man

Unlike the rest of you, I cheerfully admit to my own utter selfishness. I am self-made, self-absorbed, self-serving, self-referential, even self-deprecating, in a charming sort of way. In short, I am all the selfs except selfless. Yet every so often, I run across a force of nature that shakes my sublime self-centeredness to its very roots. Something that tears through the landscape like a tornado, leaving nothing but ruin and reexamination in its wake. Something like Bob.
—Victor Carl

A beautiful young woman is dead, her husband convicted of the murder. In seeking a new trial for the husband, defense attorney Victor Carl must confront not only a determined prosecutor and a police detective who might have set up his client, but also a strange little busybody named Bob.

Bob has the aspiration, one could even say compulsion, to help those around him. And it usually works out well for all concerned, except when it ends in blood. But Victor doesn’t know that . . . yet.

Thanks to Bob, Victor is suddenly dressing better, dating a stunning woman, and both his economic prospects and his teeth are gleaming. It’s all good, until Victor finds a troubling connection between Bob and the murdered wife. Is Bob a kind of saint or is this obsessive Good Samaritan, in reality, a murderer?

Filled with the keen wit, deep poignancy, twisting suspense, and dark realism that has entranced readers, impressed reviewers, and made William Lashner’s previous novels bestsellers, Falls the Shadow is a riveting novel sure to leave readers eager for more.

Synopsis

New York Times bestselling author William Lashner returns with a brilliantly twisty tale that probes the dark side of the law — and man

Unlike the rest of you, I cheerfully admit to my own utter selfishness. I am self-made, self-absorbed, self-serving, self-referential, even self-deprecating, in a charming sort of way. In short, I am all the selfs except selfless. Yet every so often, I run across a force of nature that shakes my sublime self-centeredness to its very roots. Something that tears through the landscape like a tornado, leaving nothing but ruin and reexamination in its wake. Something like Bob.
—Victor Carl

A beautiful young woman is dead, her husband convicted of the murder. In seeking a new trial for the husband, defense attorney Victor Carl must confront not only a determined prosecutor and a police detective who might have set up his client, but also a strange little busybody named Bob.

Bob has the aspiration, one could even say compulsion, to help those around him. And it usually works out well for all concerned, except when it ends in blood. But Victor doesn’t know that ...yet.

Thanks to Bob, Victor is suddenly dressing better, dating a stunning woman, and both his economic prospects and his teeth are gleaming. It’s all good, until Victor finds a troubling connection between Bob and the murdered wife. Is Bob a kind of saint or is this obsessive Good Samaritan, in reality, a murderer?

Filled with the keen wit, deep poignancy, twisting suspense, and dark realism that has entranced readers, impressed reviewers, and made William Lashner’s previous novels bestsellers, Falls the Shadow is a riveting novel sure to leave readers eager for more.

Publishers Weekly

Payment in advance lures cheerfully selfish criminal defense attorney Victor Carl (who last fought the good fight in 2004's Past Due) to seek a new trial for Fran ois Dub , a charming French chef convicted of murdering his beautiful wife, in Lashner's fifth legal thriller. Like every case in every courtroom drama, Dub 's is more complicated than it first appears, involving secrets that could humiliate, if not bring down, half of Philadelphia society. Carl, who thinks Dub did it even as his partner, Beth Derringer, says otherwise, is further distracted by a new pro bono client he's taken on and a throbbing toothache that sends him into the less-than-tender hands of Dr. Bob, a dentist who takes a holistic approach by involving himself in every aspect of his patients' lives. Soon Carl's getting himself a new girlfriend, a new wardrobe, new dental work and a new set of troubles from the cream of Philadelphia high life. Lashner works overtime to amuse the reader, arming his tough-talking characters with jokes to spare, leading to a tone that's somewhere between Raymond Chandler and Chandler Bing. Toning down the relentless wisecracking might have helped sell the more serious parts of the book (would the victim's grieving mother really tease Carl about his missing tooth?), but the well-staged plot twists and Carl's amusingly amoral narration make for good beach reading. Agent, Wendy Sherman. (May) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

About the Author, William Lashner

New York Times bestselling author William Lashner is the author of seven suspense novels that have been published in more than a dozen languages throughout the world. A graduate of the University of Iowa's Writers' Workshop, he lives with his family outside of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

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Editorials

Wall Street Journal

"Falls the Shadow manages to be both deadly serious and frequently hilarious."

Texas Lawyer

"For a novel that is like life, read William Lashner’s Falls the Shadow."

Wall Street Journal

“Falls the Shadow manages to be both deadly serious and frequently hilarious.”

Texas Lawyer

“For a novel that is like life, read William Lashner’s Falls the Shadow.”

Publishers Weekly

Payment in advance lures cheerfully selfish criminal defense attorney Victor Carl (who last fought the good fight in 2004's Past Due) to seek a new trial for Fran ois Dub , a charming French chef convicted of murdering his beautiful wife, in Lashner's fifth legal thriller. Like every case in every courtroom drama, Dub 's is more complicated than it first appears, involving secrets that could humiliate, if not bring down, half of Philadelphia society. Carl, who thinks Dub did it even as his partner, Beth Derringer, says otherwise, is further distracted by a new pro bono client he's taken on and a throbbing toothache that sends him into the less-than-tender hands of Dr. Bob, a dentist who takes a holistic approach by involving himself in every aspect of his patients' lives. Soon Carl's getting himself a new girlfriend, a new wardrobe, new dental work and a new set of troubles from the cream of Philadelphia high life. Lashner works overtime to amuse the reader, arming his tough-talking characters with jokes to spare, leading to a tone that's somewhere between Raymond Chandler and Chandler Bing. Toning down the relentless wisecracking might have helped sell the more serious parts of the book (would the victim's grieving mother really tease Carl about his missing tooth?), but the well-staged plot twists and Carl's amusingly amoral narration make for good beach reading. Agent, Wendy Sherman. (May) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

As he defends a husband accused of murder, attorney Victor Carl is getting a lot of social polishing from an obsessively friendly dentist he just met. Just a coincidence? Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Lashner's sardonic defense attorney unravels layers of deception in the retrial of a charming convicted killer. A dark and stylish woman named Velma Takahashi hires Philadelphia lawyers Victor Carl (Past Due, 2004, etc.) and Beth Derringer to secure a new trial for suave chef Francois Dube, who has already served three years for the violent murder of his wife Leesa. He-or someone-shot her through the neck. Victor, who dryly narrates the tale, is unconvinced of Dube's innocence and concerned that Beth, "the patron saint of lost causes," has fallen for his continental charm and blinded herself to the facts. Nonetheless, money talks; the two take the case, and Victor begins investigating. And there's much to look into. The state's star witness was Seamus Dent, a petty criminal with an addiction to karaoke. Not long after the trial, he was killed in a suspicious police shooting. Victor reconstructs this crime, while also looking into the checkered past of a police detective named Torricelli, another key witness who may have perjured himself, and verifying allegations of Dube's rampant womanizing. The supposed flash point for the killing was Leesa's confrontation of Dube regarding his extracurricular activities. Relatedly, who is Velma Takahashi and why is she footing the bill for Dube's defense? Victor digs up several seamy backstories about the Dubes, including drug addiction and pornography with underage participants. Along the way, he and Beth have several disagreements stemming from their different views of the defendant, arguments that put a real strain on their relationship. A grim and equally complex though less grisly subplot has Victor on the trail of missing children in a pro bonofamily court case. Meanwhile, casting a pall over Victor's life and a comic sheen on the story is the saga of Victor's increasingly throbbing tooth. He makes the mistake of choosing loopy Dr. Bob Pfeiffer to ease his dental pain. Another overstuffed ramble through the legal system from Lashner, who trades smart and entertaining riffs for narrative tension.

Book Details

Published
April 1, 2006
Publisher
HarperCollins Publishers
Pages
528
Format
Mass Market Paperback
ISBN
9780060721589

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