The Brass Verdict (Mickey Haller, #2)
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The Brass Verdict (Mickey Haller #2)

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3.94 of 5 stars 3.94  ·  rating details  ·  8,501 ratings  ·  1,164 reviews
Things are finally looking up for defense attorney Mickey Haller. After two years of wrong turns, Haller is back in the courtroom. When Hollywood lawyer Jerry Vincent is murdered, Haller inherits his biggest case yet: the defense of Walter Elliott, a prominent studio executive accused of murdering his wife and her lover. But as Haller prepares for the case that could launc...more
Mass Market Paperback, 545 pages
Published September 1st 2009 by Warner Books (first published January 1st 2008)
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Michael
Lawyer Mickey Haller is back and this time he gets to share the spotlight with Connolly's L.A. Detective Harry Bosch.

It's been over a year since the events of "The Lincoln Lawyer" and Haller is looking to get back into the world of lawyering. He gets to do so in a big way, when a fellow lawyer is killed and leaves his practice to Haller. At stake are 30 or so cases, including a big one where a Hollywood movie mogul is accused of killing his wife and her lover. Circumstan...more
Kellie
Connelly has some of the best quotes in his books.
"There is nothing you can do about the past except keep it there." A quote from Mickey Haller when discussing his prior addiction to OxyContin.

This was a fantastic read! Mickey Haller is taking a break from the law. After being injured, and becoming addicted to pain pills, he is planning on getting back into his practice gradually. When one of his colleagues, Jerry Vincent, is murdered, Haller has suddenly found hi...more
Jeanette
Another winner from Michael Connelly. I always have to ration myself when I get one of his new books so I don't go through it too fast and then have to wait forever for the next one. I think I managed to make this one last a whole five days.

This one is fun because it brings Harry Bosch (our old fave) and Mickey Haller (from The Lincoln Lawyer) together in the same book. Mickey is the main character and narrator in the story, but Bosch appears at all the right moments with his cle...more
Michael
Michael rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: Any mystery fans, Michael Connelly fans, courtroom mystery fans.
Recommended to Michael by: Love the author.
Mickey Hatcher is back after being wounded. He's summoned to the judge's office where he learns that his friend and courtroom advesary, Jerry Vincent has been murdered.
Hatcher is to take over his cases and the most notorious is that of Walter Elliot, on trial for killing his wife and her lover.
Hatcher must put together a defense team to defend this wealthy and dislikable character.
Det. Harry Bosch enters the book as the lead investigator of Vincent's murder. He thinks that Hat...more
Lori Anderson
I love Harry Bosch, and I hated how he was portrayed in this book. He was a side character in this one, so I didn't expect to like it as well, but I kept getting bored. Kind of meh, but I love Connelly, so I'll give it a pass.

Lori Anderson

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Paula
Paula rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: Legal thriller fans
Like The Lincoln Lawyer, this second book featuring attorney Mickey Haller delves into the often amusing and usually unsavory realities of defending accused criminals. Even though Haller's been struggling with a painkiller addiction he's still a barrel of laughs compared to police detective Harry Bosch, who shows up investigating the murder of another lawyer. If you've read any of Connelly's Bosch series you'll enjoy hearing what Haller makes of him, and at the same time you might find yoursel...more
Barb
Michael Connelly's books are the best and it's so exciting when a new one comes out. In this book he brings back Mickey Haller from another of his tomes (The Lincoln Lawyer) and the other protagonist is the infamous Harry Bosch - my favorite. I couldn't put this book down and the circuitous paths the story took made it more exciting. I adore Connelly so much, I would read his grocery list and probably find it a great and interesting work. If you haven't read Michael Connelly's books, get sta...more
Linda
One of my favorite genres is Detective-in-Recovery (or Detective Dealing with Some Other Personal Demon)-- and Michael Connelly delivers a double in this one. Mickey, the attorney from THE LINCOLN LAWYER, and Harry Bosch star, but it's really Mickey who has the lead. Out of recovery and about to step back into the courtroom scene, Mickey suddenly has to cover another attorney's caseload when that attorney is murdered. The solution to the murder is probably in the files for one of those cases, an...more
Wyma
Connelly's such a good writer that it's hard to fault him. The Lincoln Lawyer however seems a bit gimmicky and the courtroom explanations go on too long. I realize that I'd probably give anyone else 4 stars for this book because it is fast paced, a good mystery w/ logical misdirection, and a plausible protagonist. We do learn a secret about another Connelly character that I won't divulge. I expect a lot from Connelly;I prefer the Bosch series and the one-offs.
Drew
I d known who Michael Connelly was, but had passed by the Harry Bosch novels on a number of occasions in order to work my way through other books and mystery series. There was no rhyme or reason to that decision. Perhaps I didn t find the descriptions on the book jackets compelling enough to lure me away from the large stack of books on my bedside table (there still is a stack, and it never seems to get any smaller).[return][return]In October, 2000, I found my reason to deviate from the book ...more
Laura
Most of Michael Connelly's books feature detective Harry Bosch and although Bosch has a minor (but ultimately important role) in this story, center stage is given to defense attorney Mickey Haller. Understand, Haller's been out of the legal arena for about a year when the story starts, but he's quickly thrust back into it when a colleague and friend is murdered and leaves all his cases to Haller. The caseload includes a homicide involving a Hollywood producer and the impending trial is certain t...more
LJ
THE BRASS VERDICT (Legal Thriller-Michael Haller-Los Angeles-Cont) - Ex
Connelly, Michael – 2nd in series
Little, Brown and Company, 2009, US Hardcover – ISBN; 0316166294

First Sentence: Everybody lies.

Michael Heller had decided to return to practice but not at this level. A former colleague is murdered and had designated Heller as the attorney to take over all his cases should something happen to him. One of those cases is defending producer Walter Elliot. ...more
Kathleen Hagen
The Brass Verdict, by Michael Connelly, A. Narrated by Peter Giles, produced by Hachette Audio, downloaded from audible.com.

Well here’s the case where Harry Bosch and Mickey Haller finally meet each other. Haller is a defense attorney who has taken time off because he had to go through rehab for his addiction to pain pills. He has finally decided to return to practice. Then he is called into the chief judge’s office. He is told that Jerry Vincent, another defense lawyer who he s...more
Melissa
This was a very satisfying quick read. Although I'm a total crime junkie, I haven't read many (any?) legal thrillers before the Mickey Haller series, and now I'm totally hooked. I love all the little side-stories with lesser clients, as well as the spectacle of the main show piece, and this one kept me speeding allong just as well as The Lincoln Lawyer did. I had assumed the book would be two-sided, half Haller, half Bosch, which wasn't the case. It was kind of odd having Bosch around but not re...more
Corie L.
I was very impressed with this book, for two reasons: it kept my interest (very important, especially as I read it in audiobook format, a hard one for me) and it didn't fail to keep me guessing.

Recovering (in more ways than one) from the events of The Lincoln Lawyer, defense attorney Mickey Haller discovers that he has unexpectedly "inherited" a colleague's entire practice. The "inheritance" is a just term, seeing as the practice's previous owner was gunned down i...more
Tony
Michael Connelly- The Brass Verdict (Little, Brown and Company 2008) 4.25 Stars

When Mickey Haller was shot after his last court case, he became addicted to the pain killers. He has now completed his rehab and is looking to ease back into the courtroom scene, but fate has something else in mind. A friend of his is murdered and all his cases are thrown into Mickey Haller’s lap, including the case of a lifetime. A big movie producer has been accused of killing his wife and her lover, an...more
Darren Gore
Back in the early 2000s, I discovered the novels of Michael Connelly and became hooked for several years. I especially liked his police procedurals starring the one and only Harry Bosch, and his now-classic serial-killer thriller 'The Poet'.

Recently, I enjoyed the movie adaptation of Connelly's novel 'The Lincoln Lawyer' and that led me to read the follow-ups 'The Brass Verdict' and 'The Reversal' - and once again, I became hooked.

Like the best of Connelly's earlier novels, '...more
Jane Stewart
Engaging legal mystery suspense. Intricate plots well developed.

REVIEWER’S OPINION:
This book is the sequel to “The Lincoln Lawyer” (TLL) but it can be read as a stand-alone. I liked TLL better, but this was still good. I love the mind and street smarts of Haller. I enjoy the way he thinks and talks. It’s clever and entertaining. At times it was a little slow, I don’t remember why, probably some of the courtroom time. It wasn’t the author’s best, but I’m glad I read it. ...more
Chanda
After Lincoln Lawyer I suspected that it might be Mickey Haller who finally replaced Myron Bolitar in my lineup of book crushes but I think Bolitar's position in my adoration is safe after all. Most of the time I don't thank Hollywood for replacing my vision of a character with their own idea but this time I was more than happy to visualize Matthew McConaughey throughout this court room thriller. The story is typical of Connelly and the genre. It was a worthwhile listen but I wouldn't add it to ...more
Skyring
Oh boy! I'm sorry I waited so long to read this one. Granted, I had a lot of books on Mount Toberead, but I really should have known that this would be something special.

The Lincoln Lawyer returns. Mickey Haller, who runs his practice from the back seat of a Lincoln Town Car, is back, suddenly going from zero to hero as he takes over the practice of a comrade unavoidably retired. He's got a big trial coming up and a client who won't accept delay.

Every chapter brings a new com...more
Donna
Although I'm a great fan of Michael Connelly, The Brass Verdict sat on my "to read" shelf for over a year before I got around to reading it. Intrigued with the deep, ongoing characterization of Harry Bosch, I wasn't sure I wanted to get into a book in which he had to share the stage with Mickey Haller, another main character. (This despite the fact that I read and loved the original Mickey Haller book, Lincoln Lawyer. Call me a purist.)

So finally, on a recent snowy evening, ...more
Dlora
Dlora rated it 4 of 5 stars
Shelves: legal-thriller
The books I have read before by Connelly have been about Harry Bosch, a hard-driven, smart, homicide detective. The Brass Verdict is about Mickey Haller, a defense lawyer, those slimy, despicable, con artists who get criminals off after the homicide detectives have collared them. While Harry Bosch does put in an appearance in this story, he plays only a small part, butting heads with our main character while trying to solve a murder. At the end of the book, Haller tells Harry Bosch that they liv...more
Laurie
Boring, formulaic.

Starred Review. Bestseller Connelly delivers one of his most intricate plots to date in his 20th book, a beautifully executed crime thriller. When L.A. lawyer Mickey Haller, last seen in The Lincoln Lawyer (2005), inherits the practice and caseload of a fellow defense attorney, Jerry Vincent, who's been murdered, the high-profile double-homicide case against famed Hollywood producer Walter Elliot, accused of shooting his wife and her alleged lover, takes top priorit...more
J
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Morris
From the Publisher:

Things are finally looking up for defense attorney Mickey Haller. After two years of wrong turns, Haller is back in the courtroom. When Hollywood lawyer Jerry Vincent is murdered, Haller inherits his biggest case yet: the defense of Walter Elliott, a prominent studio executive accused of murdering his wife and her lover. But as Haller prepares for the case that could launch him into the big time, he learns that Vincent's killer may be coming for him next.

...more
Bonnie
Didn't mean to read this book. Had to give tours at the new Riverton hospital all day with lulls easily of 15 minutes or more and one of the few times I didn't have a book on me, so I ran to the gift shop, and with my choice of Danielle Steele and Nora Roberts books, Michael Connelly was a dead ringer. Crazy enough, I was probably in this type of situation before and picked up his Lincoln Lawyer, and City of Bones, so it was kind of nice to know the main character(s). In fact, this is his only b...more
Gerald
Brass Verdict is a nearly perfect book. It's a first-person court procedural, told by defense attorney Mickey Haller, main character of Lincoln Lawyer. Harry Bosch is in there, too, in the third person. Fascinating switch.

The plotting is razor-sharp, all the setups there for the twist-twist-and-twist-again in the final pages.

But I think back to Hammett. As many times as I've read The Thin Man and seen the movie, I still don't completely understand the plot or the motivati...more
Steven Kent
Let me start by admitting that I am a sucker for Michael Connelly novels. The guy tells stories that I like to hear.

In this case, the story is about L.A. lawyer Mickey Haller, a sometimes successful/sometimes down-and-out defender-for-hire with a lot of talent and a shriveled conscience. His first wife has left him. His second marriage only lasted a few weeks.

All of this is backstory.

In Brass Verdict, Haller inherits a headline case when a legal ally of his...more
Susan Katz
Michael Connelly is a fine mystery writer with compelling characters, literate writing, and engrossing plots. This one - in which Mickey Haller, recovering from an Oxycontin addition after a gunshot wound, suddenly inherits all the cases belonging to his murdered colleague, Jerry Vincent - is a winner. Vincent's death may or may not involve the FBI and may or may not be connected to his most prominent case, the defense of a Hollywood bigwig accused of killing his wife and her lover. Everyone ...more
Christy
After two years recuperating from a gunshot wound and subsequent addiction to pain pills, defense attorney Mickey Haller thinks he’s ready for work, although he intends to take things slow and easy. When his colleague Jerry Vincent is murdered, Haller, as Vincent’s surrogate, inherits his active cases, one of which is garnering much media attention. Hollywood producer Walter Elliott has been accused of murdering his wife and her lover, and his trial’s coming up within days. Elliott refuses to al...more
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this guy knows the courts! 21 41 Feb 04, 2012 10:46am  
The Brass Verdict (Mickey Haller, #2)
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The Brass Verdict (Mickey Haller, #2)
The Brass Verdict (Mickey Haller, #2) (Harry Bosch, #14)

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Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the Goodreads' database with this name. See this thread for more information.

Michael Connelly decided to become a writer after discovering the books of Raymond Chandler while attending the University of Florida. Once he decided on this direction he chose a major in journalism and a minor in creative writing — a curriculum in which one o...more
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