Ratings2
Average rating4
WHAT IF you had to choose between:your seven-figure salaryyour fancy house in the exclusive suburbyour memberships at a posh health club and even posher country clubyour marriage(not your soul; you've been renting it out for so long, it's as good as sold)anddoing the right thingAnd what if in doing the right thing, all of the above still wasn't enough and you risked having to pay the ultimate price? This is the choice that Scott Fenney faces when he's assigned a political hot potato of a pro bono defense case in Mark Gimenez's debut legal thriller, The Color of Law.A poor-boy college football hero turned successful partner at a prominent Dallas firm--who long ago checked his conscience at the door--catches a case that forces him to choose between his enviable lifestyle and doing the right thing in this masterful debut legal thriller.Clark McCall, ne'er-do-well son of Texas millionaire senator and presidential hopeful Mack McCall, puts a major crimp in his father's election plans when he winds up murdered--apparently by Shawanda Jones, a heroin-addicted hooker--after a tawdry night of booze, drugs, and rough sex.Scott Fenney, who's worked his way to being a partner at an elite Dallas law firm, is assigned to provide Shawanda's pro bono defense after the federal judge on the case hears him deliver an inspiring, altruistic--and completely insincere--speech to the local bar association. Scott plans to farm the case out to an old law school buddy, do-good-attorney Bobby Herrin. But his plans go awry when Shawanda puts her foot down in court and refuses to be passed off to the lawyer she considers the lesser attorney.As the case unfolds, pressure is exerted on Scott to deter him from being too aggressive in his defense of Shawanda. That pressure becomes palpable as Scott is slowly stripped of the things he's come to care for most. Will he do the right thing--at a terrible cost--or the easy thing and keep his hard-earned fabulous life?With echoes of early John Grisham, THE COLOR OF LAW is a provocative page-turner that marks the stunning debut of a major new talent.
Featured Series
2 primary booksScott Fenney is a 2-book series with 2 primary works first released in 2005 with contributions by Mark Gimenez.
Reviews with the most likes.
First,the good: Gimenez can really write a page turner. Also, his prose is great - he really makes the scenes come alive. So much so that Dallas, the city, becomes a character in the book.
The not so great - his characters have the depth and complexity of a blank sheet of paper. He basically paints them in broad strokes of black and white; there's no grey subtlety to them. So you have the selfish trophy wife who cares only for money, greedy lawyer without a conscience, crack addicted prostitute with a heart of gold. Stereotypes all of them, but what's galling are the racial stereotypes. Almost every rich white person in this book is racist. Heck every rich person in this book is white and the Hispanics are servants and the African Americans talk in gangsta and live in the projects.
It gets grating after a while, but I at least enjoyed Scott's journey from being a one dimensional greedy lawyer to a one dimensional reformed do gooder lawyer.