Burden Of Proof (Kindle County Legal Thriller #2)
by
Scott Turow
Turow's acclaimed second novel, which topped international bestseller lists, is now available in trade paperback. Sandy Stern, the brilliant defense attorney from Presumed Innocent, faces an event so emotionally shattering that no part of his life is left untouched. It reveals a family caught in a maelstrom of hidden crimes, shocking secrets, and warring passions.
Published
(first published November 30th 1989)
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Following the simultaneous written and cinematic success of its predecessor, "Presumed Innocent," Scott Turow again returns to Kindle County for another dramatic exploration of the emotional vagaries of lives wrapped in the curious legal subculture of American society. In Turow's "Burden of Proof," we find ourselves three years following the events of "Presumed Innocent" as a spectator in the life of Sandy Stern, the attorney who famously defended Rusty Sabich in the murder trial from the prior...more
For some reason, I found this book difficult to read. Mr. Turow has a peculiar way of wording sentences (some of them, not all of them), such that some sentences I find myself reading 2 or 3 times, and still not understanding what he is saying. As in PRESUMED INNOCENT, there is much insight into interpersonal relationships, and he will frequently (when introducing a new character) go back into a somewhat detailed description of past history with that character. His introspection into Sandy’s rel...more
This is really a very excellent book. The only reason I'm not giving it a 10 is because I found it a bit hard to follow at times. Turow has done an amazing job though of bringing us into the mind of a man who is a defense attorney. We often read books of courtroom scenes, and how a prosecutor thinks, but not very often of how a defense attorney thinks. Stern is from Argentina, so his patriotism to America is immense, he still has a bit of an accent (which he allows to intimidate him), his wife h...more
Scott Turow had written an award-winning novel Presumed Innocent in 1987. In 1990, he released this second fiction The Burden of Proof that I picked up to read only recently. Scott Turow is a trained and practising lawyer. I was drawn to reading his other books because of Presumed Innocent where the plot, the twists and turns, and the cut and thrust in a court-room setting were so clearly written for a non-lawyer like me to follow the story-line.
The Burden of Proof revolves around the family of...more
The Burden of Proof revolves around the family of...more
Scott Turow is more than a writer of legal thrillers. He is a real novelist using the law to reflect on human ego and weakness. His Kindle County, where all of his novels actions take place, is not exactly a moral wasteland but a soiled and imperfect place where there are no easy solutions. His main character in this novel, Sandy Stern, a cosmopolitan defense attorney, lends this novel real gravity with his impressions and his understanding that the law is something of a slipshod negotiation bet...more
Feb 27, 2012
Grant
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommended to Grant by:
Jane McNeil
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.
Brave writer, to begin with a suicide, a mother of four grown children found dead in her car in the garage. That sent fair-weather readers scurrying....
Turow sees us inside and out, by our own laws, more deadly than any laws courts can touch.
"Thirty-odd years ago, Clara Mittler had drafted a composition, called it Clara Stern, and remained intent on playing it to the end. It was a woodwind part of austere and unwavering beauty, and he [Alessandro Stern] was the uncritical audience, one set of ha...more
Turow sees us inside and out, by our own laws, more deadly than any laws courts can touch.
"Thirty-odd years ago, Clara Mittler had drafted a composition, called it Clara Stern, and remained intent on playing it to the end. It was a woodwind part of austere and unwavering beauty, and he [Alessandro Stern] was the uncritical audience, one set of ha...more
Sandy Stern is a high powered defense attorney who is defending his brother-in-law from insider trading and racketeering charges while dealing with guilt over the suicide of his wife and his strained relationships with his children. He is a man who is possessed by the law and being a lawyer and who struggles to focus on the needs of those closest to him. I liked the book pretty well - Turow does a good job of character development and I like his dialog. I guessed fairly early in the novel the re...more
Well this certainly an involved story. There are close to fifteen major characters and about five or six minor characters. A lot of people to juggle and I did get them confused. The story unfolds with a suicide and I almost walked away from it but the secret surprise about the dead woman kept me going. I did not understand any of the legal issues regarding the actual crime. But in the end it was a pretty interesting book. The ending was a surprise but I should have expected it since everyone sl...more
I had about 2 minutes at the library book sale after spending forever with the kids! So I grabbed 3 Scott Turow books. I used to enjoy courtroom dramas and hadn't read them in a very long time since I got involved in a book club that chose far more intelligent books! Every book seemed similar to me. In fact they were set in the same place and had some of the same characters. It's been a couple months since I read them all and I've already forgotten them. They are entertaining as you read them, b...more
Sandy Stern, the lawyer for Rusty Sabich in the previous two Turrow books, tries to unravel the why's of his wifes suicide. His son-and seemingly well intentioned foe--or real foe, the neighbor the Dr., his daughterKates husband John, andhis lawyer daughter, all figure into the mystery. The plot is moved along by another plot, Sandy's sister Sylvia, whose husband is a huge trader of commodities, a gambler, and the suspect in many wall street insider trading violatio s. The twists put the enthusi...more
I thought I would try to read some quick mystery books to shorten my TBR pile. This book has 515 pages so it appears that winnowing effort will have to wait a while longer. This book could be 300 pages instead of 500. But it would be missing many of the human interactions that make this book so enjoyable and memorable.
The legal territory we enter by reading this book includes The Grand Jury. For me, that is an education. I have, of course, heard about Grand Juries many times but, with the help o...more
The legal territory we enter by reading this book includes The Grand Jury. For me, that is an education. I have, of course, heard about Grand Juries many times but, with the help o...more
I read Presumed Innocent more than 10 years ago and it saved my opinion of legal thrillers, which I thought had been irreparably damaged by John Grisham. Ever since then, if I hear of a Grisham fan, I always tell him/her, "well if you like Grisham, you really need to try Scott Turow, because he can actually write." While that does remain true with The Burden of Proof, I do understand why it isn't as popular as his other books.
Sandy Stern, the defense attorney in Presumed Innocent, arrives home...more
Sandy Stern, the defense attorney in Presumed Innocent, arrives home...more
Oct 21, 2012
Kristen
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
2012,
legal-thriller-courtroom-drama
This is another great and fantastic legal thriller. This one deals with Sandy Stern. This one deals with tons of surprises and some trips down to Memory Lane with flashback, right after his wife commits suicide. But from there, he deals with an emotional load of stuff with his children and his client/brother-in-law in an embittered battle. But with every twist and turns, he discovers some family secrets behind the scenes. We really see the emotions he goes through from grieving to outraged throu...more
Sep 01, 2010
Rebecca Huston
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
20th-century,
fiction
A very good novel, and probably my favourite of all of Scott Turow's books. A tale of marriage, family and suicide not to mention a fairly decent thriller. Sandy Stern (first seen in presumed innocent) comes home to find his wife has committed suicide -- and we follow his life in the months that follow as he tries to keep his life together and understand why his wife would do something like that.
For a longer review, please go here:
http://www.epinions.com/content_29816...
For a longer review, please go here:
http://www.epinions.com/content_29816...
Sep 20, 2011
Diana
rated it
3 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommended to Diana by:
Crystal
Within the opening pages, Turow presents you with a dead body. Intriguing interaction of characters and lots of family drama. I was not so big on the stock market/money grubbing details, so I skimmed through a lot of that--just enough to get "the just". Thought I had the guilty parties dead to right but was wrong. That's what makes this an engaging book, trying to second guess the outcome.
This was a good book - really got into the emotions and turmoil the main character, Sandy Stern, felt after his wife committed suicide. But these emotions were exposed slowly throughout the book, while he carried on his business life as a lawyer, attempted to mend his relationships with his grown children, and fumbled through his new personal life, trying to get a grip on being widowed at 56.
This one was a struggle for me to get through. Just found it highly unbelievable and quite frankly-a big disappointment after Presumed Innocent. Sandy Stern was unforgettable in Presumed Innocent-in this one-he is just an old horn dog lusting after everything that moves. He doesn't seem to be the same character at all-ridiculous.
Hopefully the next book by this author will be better.
Originally read in 1991.
Hopefully the next book by this author will be better.
Originally read in 1991.
When Alejandro Stern's wife of 30 years commits suicide leaving a single sentence in a note "can you forgive me?" Stern finds his life in disarray. At the same time Stern is confronted with defending his beligerent brother-in-law from possibly Ricco charges. The amazing twists and turns throughout this book leads Stern to the truth behind his wife's suicide, the part he inadvertently played in it, and how twisted one's life can become without even trying. Each of Stern's awakenings lead to anoth...more
Bam, the book starts off with the discovery of the suicide of the main character's wife. Ha, no spoilers because it was so early on. There are many betrayals, and that adds to the dark nature of the book. The book starts off bad, and proceeds to get worse (in tone, not quality). I remember this book mainly for its characters who were supposedly friends with the greatest trust.
I have mixed feelings on this one. On the one hand, Turow's courtroom drama is as good as ever. On the other hand, there was surprisingly little of it in evidence. Most of the book tracked the dysfunctional family interactions of the protagonist, a fussy, officious lawyer who is at times casually immoral, and at other times, so devoted to his principles that he's willing to go to jail rather than violate them. Like all Turow novels, it's full of unexpected surprises that force you to reinterpret...more
Turow is an even better writer here than his previous books. His main character is dignified, reserved, intelligent. Something shocking happens that compels him to understand his world perhaps better than he wanted to. He is endlessly disoriented. He finds he didn't really know anyone around him. Lots of twists.
Mar 17, 2013
Momina Masood
rated it
3 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
legal-thrillers
A widower struggling with his libido shouldn't turn you off here, because it's so much more than that! The protagonist's utter humanness and weakness makes one go on and finish it. This one will make you see each house with a sad suspicion the next time you walk through your neighborhood. Go try it!
The Burden Of Proof was my first Turow book to read. It was not the typical legal thriller and not a page-turner for me. There were no cold-blooded murderers to defend, but a lot of attorneys talk analyzing the law. It is also full of the mechanism of financial markets and the concept of future trading. Too much boring parts than good parts.
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Scott F. Turow is an American author and a practicing lawyer. Turow has written eight fiction and two nonfiction books, which have been translated into over 20 languages and have sold over 25 million copies. Movies have been based on several of his books.
Series:
* Kindle County Legal Thriller
http://us.macmillan.com/author/scottt...
More about Scott Turow...
Series:
* Kindle County Legal Thriller
http://us.macmillan.com/author/scottt...
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