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Local Rules by Jay Brandon β€” book cover

Local Rules

by Jay Brandon
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Overview

The old brick county courthouse casts the longest shadow in Green Hills, Texas, and when Jordan Marshall is ticketed for speeding, he's hauled before the bench of Judge Richard Waverly. The judge's interest quickens when he discovers that Jordan is a former assistant district attorney, and a practicing lawyer in San Antonio. His Honor has a job for a city boy like him: serve as court-appointed defender for Wayne Orkney, a local boy charged with the attempted murder of his own best buddy. When an outrageous bail is set, Jordan knows his sullen client is being railroaded. The defendant stands speechless before the court, the whole town arrayed against him - and it's up to Jordan to find out why.

When citified attorney Jordan Marshall is ticketed for speeding and hauled before the bench of Judge Waverly of Green Hills, Texas, he is sentenced to serve as court-appointed defender for Wayne Orkney, a local boy accused of attempted murder of his best friend. When the charges escalate to capital murder, he must risk the wildest stunt of his courtroom career to get to the truth.

About the Author, Jay Brandon

Jay Brandon

Jay Brandon is a successful attorney and the award-winning author of 15 mystery novels. His bestselling book Fade the Heat was published in 13 foreign countries, was optioned by Steven Spielberg's Amblin Entertainment, and nominated for an Edgar Allan Poe Award. He lives in San Antonio, Texas.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

An overeager sheriff's deputy sparks the quirk of fate that finds Jordan Marshall, former prosecuting attorney in San Antonio, acting as defense for a young man accused of murder in a tiny Texas town. Hauled in to the Green Hills courthouse on a speeding violation, Marshall is appointed by the presiding judge to represent the murder suspect in his arraignment. But what should have been a five-minute pro forma exercise takes on life-changing importance as Marshall, convinced that justice is being ill-served in the case, uncovers another murder and turns up a big-city number of small-town secrets. In swiftly moving prose and with an affectionately rendered, credible cast, Brandon (Loose Among the Lambs) delivers a solid string of riveting, detailed courtroom dramas-and some moving bedroom scenes as well. A few holes in the plot and an obvious red herring do little to impede the pleasures of time spent in the company of Marshall and the Green Hills' citizenry. (May)

Library Journal

The author of the popular Loose Among the Lambs writes of small-town murder.

Wes Lukowsky

Jordan Marshall, a San Antonio lawyer, is on his way to the beach when he's stopped for speeding in Green Hills, Texas. In lieu of paying a fine, he's asked by Judge Waverly to represent young Wayne Orkney, charged with attempted murder as a result of a beating administered to his best friend, Kevin Wainwright. Although confused by the severity of the charge and the prosecution's unyielding resolve to send Orkney to prison for a long, long time, Marshall agrees. When Wainwright unexpectedly dies in the hospital, the charge escalates to murder. Marshall, a step behind everyone in town, finally begins to piece the case together after he establishes a relationship with the judge's devoted court reporter, Laura Stefone. The court's attitude toward Marshall's hapless client is based on the fact that everyone assumes he killed local golden girl Jenny Fecklewhite just before he beat Wainwright. There's no hard evidence to tie him to the girl's death, but justice will be served if Orkney gets life for Wainwright. The resolution of the case lies in the not-so-distant past. Readers who place Grisham and Turow at the top of their courtroom suspense list will be forced to revise the rankings. Excellent.

Book Details

Published
September 1, 1995
Publisher
Thorndike Press
Pages
532
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780786204908

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