๐”– Bobbio Scriptorium
โœฆ   LIBER   โœฆ

Cover of Pleading guilty

Pleading guilty

โœ Scribed by Turow, Scott


Book ID
107876608
Publisher
New York, NY : Warner Vision Books, [1994]
Year
1993
Tongue
English
Weight
221 KB
Category
Fiction

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

โœฆ Synopsis


From Publishers Weekly

Murder, embezzlement, bookmaking, offshore banking, and the politics of a high-powered law firm supply varying shades of corruption as Turow ( Presumed Innocent ; The Burden of Proof ) returns to Kindle County in this wise, surefooted legal thriller. World-weary attorney Mack Malloy, 50-ish ex-cop and recovering alcoholic, is the protagonist and narrator. Despite humiliating annual pay cuts, Mack plods on at Gage & Griswell, nearing the end of his usefulness. When another partner in the firm disappears, along with several million dollars, Mack is assigned the difficult and potentially dangerous job of discreetly discovering his whereabouts. During a one-month time span, Mack dictates his account onto six tapes corresponding to the book's chapters. It is an engaging, street-wise narrative full of plain talk and homespun philosophy, as well as a candid account of the behind-the-scenes workings of a powerful law firm. Though every element of the novel is polished and professional, the charisma of Mack's narration is its triumph. Add that to a taut, twist-filled plot, expert pacing, colorful and well-rendered supporting characters, and an appealing whiff of larceny, and Turow surpasses Grisham hands down. 875,000 first printing; Franklin Library First Edition; BOMC and QPB main selection; paperback to Warner; author tour.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

Instead of cranking out clones of Presumed Innocent, Turow has preferred to take chances - first with The Burden of Proof, which dispensed with his whodunit plot, and now, even more radically, with a foulmouthed, alcoholic lawyer's account of his search for one of his missing partners - and the $5.6 million that vanished with him. If it weren't for the money - redirected from mega-client TransNational Air's accident settlement escrow to a nonexistent firm called Litiplex - nobody at Gage & Griswell would likely notice that their erratic star litigator Bert Kamin hadn't been in lately. As it is, the Management Oversight Committee - ageless Martin Gold, dried-up Wash Thale, and contrary Carl Pagnucci - is so fearful of scaring off TransNational that they press their fading ex-cop partner Mack McCormack, and not the police, into looking for Bert. Mack soon ties Bert in to a false credit card, a secret affair, a scheme to shave points off college basketball games, and a rapidly cooling corpse. As he doubles back to Gage & Griswell to follow Bert's trail, Mack runs afoul of Det. Gino (Pigeyes) Dimonte, the crooked cop his testimony once brought down, and has to enlist the unlikely help of ancient, deeply dishonest attorney Toots Nuccio to stay one jump ahead of his colleagues. Why? Because once Bert and the money have surfaced, separately, the most original phase of Turow's plot has just begun, as Mack struggles to figure out what to do with the cash, his increasingly divided loyalties, and the question of guilt while wandering among a knot of free-lance legal conspirators who change their allegiances more often than their underwear. In switching from Rusty Sabich and Sandy Stern to hard-bitten Mack Malloy, Turow's entering a much more crowded field, and neither Mack nor the byzantine plot he stumbles on is clearly superior to the competition from Grif Stockley, John T. Lescroart, or Clifford Irving. But his legion of fans surely won't miss the chance to see Turow as they've never seen him before. (Kirkus Reviews) --Kirkus Reviews

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๐Ÿ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


cover
โœ Turow, Scott ๐Ÿ“‚ Fiction ๐Ÿ“… 1993 ๐Ÿ› New York, NY : Warner Vision Books, [1994] ๐ŸŒ English โš– 218 KB

### From Publishers Weekly Murder, embezzlement, bookmaking, offshore banking, and the politics of a high-powered law firm supply varying shades of corruption as Turow ( Presumed Innocent ; The Burden of Proof ) returns to Kindle County in this wise, surefooted legal thriller. World-weary attorney

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โœ Turow, Scott ๐Ÿ“‚ Fiction ๐Ÿ“… 1993 ๐Ÿ› Macmillan ๐ŸŒ English โš– 280 KB

Returning to the now-renowned locale of Kindle County, Scott Turow gives us Mack Malloy, ex-cop, not-quite-ex-drunk, and partner-on-the-wane in one of the country's most high-powered law firms. A longtime ally of the wayward, Mack is on the trail of a colleague, his firm's star litigator, who has va

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โœ Turow, Scott ๐Ÿ“‚ Fiction ๐Ÿ“… 1993 ๐Ÿ› Twtp Assorted ๐ŸŒ en-GB โš– 218 KB

### From Wikipedia Pleading Guilty, published in 1993, is Scott Turow's third novel, and like the previous two it is set in fictional Kindle County. ### From Publishers Weekly Murder, embezzlement, bookmaking, offshore banking, and the politics of a high-powered law firm supply varying shades of

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โœ Turow, Scott ๐Ÿ“‚ Fiction ๐ŸŒ en-jm โš– 226 KB
Pleading Guilty
โœ Turow, Scott ๐Ÿ“‚ Fiction ๐ŸŒ English โš– 223 KB
cover
โœ Turow, Scott ๐Ÿ“‚ Fiction ๐ŸŒ en-GB โš– 217 KB

SUMMARY: The author of the #1 New York Times bestsellers Presumed Innocent and The Burden of Proof delivers another stellar bestseller. An ex-cop partner at a high-powered law firm tracks the firm's star litigator, who has disappeared with $5 million of a client's money. Don't miss Turow's bestsel