In 1793, Virginia’s most powerful family found itself embroiled in
scandal: Richard Randolph and his sister-in-law, the beautiful Nancy
Randolph, were charged with adultery and infanticide. Richard Randolph
demanded a public trial. Richard’s stepfather, Judge Henry St. George
Tucker, hired John Marshall, a young lawyer who was connected to their
family through marriage. John Marshall would go on to become the
greatest Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, a man whose theories
of law are now taught to every first year law student, though at the
time of the Randolph trial he was relatively unknown. Uncertain about
Marshall’s abilities, the Randolph family—at the last minute and
unbeknownst to Marshall—brought in co-counsel; none other than founding
father and former Virginia governor Patrick Henry. Henry’s wild,
improvisational style clashed with Marshall’s reasoned defense based on
the facts, but Henry was so successful that Marshall was forced to learn
from him—and then to improve on the master. Author Michael Schein, a
former professor of American legal history, drew on John Marshall’s
actual trial notes in writing this novel that centers on the trial of
the 18th century. Just Deceits shows how the remarkable defense team of
wily Patrick Henry and ambitious John Marshall battled each other, their
clients, the prosecution, and the truth itself, in an effort to save
their clients from the gallows.
In its ribald portrayal of a
young legal system already driven more by spectacle than evidence, Just
Deceits calls into question the feasibility of uncovering "the whole
truth." Ultimately, as secrets are revealed and relationships brought to
light, Just Deceits tells a story as much about the trials of love as
about the trial in the courtroom.
Click here to get the Kindle edition of this book for FREE!!!
Monday, January 16, 2012
FREE -- US Kindle Edition -- Just Deceits: A Historical Courtroom Mystery by Michael Schein
Labels:
Fiction,
Historical,
Historical Fiction,
Legal,
Mystery
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