The Associate is a book about a law firm associate named Daniel who is defending the Geller pharmaceutical company that is accused of manufacturing a drug that causes birth defects. Daniel is forced to test his own morals and figure out who his true friends are, solve the case, and clear his own name from murder.
Daniel usually neglects to think about his future consequences of his actions. For example, when he is asked to go to a cemetery in the middle of the night to talk to a murder suspect, Daniel chose to only think about the benefit of the extra evidence he’d be getting for the murder case, and not about the high possibility of it being a trap. Daniel is also too nice for his own good, like when he agreed to help Susan when asked him to review and proofread thousands of documents over night and deliver them by 8:00 in the morning.
Phillip Margolin (the author) didn’t use a ton of figurative language and not much of it stood out and forced you to think about what he is truly trying to say. Most of the figurative language was casual like “Briggs just continued to stare at him as if he were some mildly interesting insect. (Margolin 97)” which isn’t bad and allows for a more easygoing read. The overall style of the writing is very casual, realistic, and down to earth.
No book is without flaws, including this one. During part 4, the main plotline is put aside for almost 60 pages. This event is hardly related to the rest of the book and doesn’t have any of the main characters. It could have easily been summarized in just a couple of pages and additionally would be more entertaining. An additional blemish is this author has a potty-mouth. The writing includes several swear words, including the F-word several times. Fortunately, the author does use the words in an intelligent way, unlike how middle schoolers would use them as sentence enhancers or for immature humor.
This book is very realistic and accurately portrays how a real murder investigation would go, including both the good and the bad. Daniel is put under arrest and jailed for murder, even though there is no solid evidence other than a single witness. This takes a spin on “innocent until proven guilty”, which turns into “guilty until proven innocent.” In an ideal world, the police would investigate Daniel and look for motives and evidence. When sufficient evidence is collected, they send him to trial and if the jury decides he is guilty then he goes to jail. Unfortunately, we, nor Daniel, live in a perfect world. Instead, we live in a world that thinks it is morally justified to send an innocent person to jail for no reason other than somebody said so.
If I had to rate this book, I’d give it 4 out of 5 stars. It is interesting with many plot twists, but it really drags during part 4. I wouldn’t recommend this book to anyone sensitive to foul language. Some events aren’t suitable for anybody younger than a high schooler. However, this is a captivating book, and if you are mature enough, I am sure you’d enjoy it.