Today I am very pleased to have Paul Levine, the author of the Jake Lassiter series on my blog.
“PART CON MAN, PART PRIEST” – JAKE LASSITER REVEALS WHO HE IS 
By Paul Levine
“They don’t call us sharks for our ability to swim.”
So says Jake Lassiter in “Flesh & Bones.”  Or rather, he thinks it  in interior dialogue, sometimes called interior monologue.  It’s one  way to reveal character and answer the reader’s question: Just who is this guy, anyway?
I’ll let Jake answer that question, but first I wanted you to know that the international bestseller “Flesh & Bones”  is now an e-book priced for a short time at $0.99, with all proceeds  going to Hershey Children’s Hospital for cancer treatment.  
Now back to Jake:  “A  good lawyer is part con man, part priest—promising riches, threatening  hell.  The rainmakers are the best paid and have coined a remarkably  candid phrase: We eat what we kill.”  
The  linebacker-turned-lawyer is a brew and burger guy in a paté and  Chardonnay world.  Noting the sign over the judge’s bench -- “We who  labor here seek only the truth…” -- he  adds his own footnote: “Subject to the truth being concealed by lying witnesses, distorted by sleazy lawyers, and excluded by inept judges.”
In “Flesh & Bones,”  Jake’s client, model Chrissy Bernhardt, is accused of killing her  father, claiming she had been raped by him as a child.  Jake seethes at  hearing this.  Anger is not usually helpful in making important  decisions, but with Jake, his fury helps form his legal strategy:
“The  male animal.  At the low end of the evolutionary scale, he lords his  physical superiority over women, beating and raping.  At the very  bottom, this horned beast is the father who would rape his own child.   For a moment, I felt like killing Harry Bernhardt myself.  Which made me  think...if I get the jury to feel the same way, maybe I can win this  case.”
Complicating  the murder trial, Jake falls for his client, while at the same time  doubting her truthfulness.  All of which creates an ethical dilemma:
“My  ethical rules are simple.  I won't lie to the court or let a client do  it.  But I've never been in this position before.  How far would I go  for a woman who mattered?  Is there anything I wouldn't do to win?”
Is  he defending an innocent woman or a guilty one?  Is there such a thing  as true justice?  Rather than answer those questions – and spoil the  book! – I’ll leave you with Jake’s final thoughts:
We  seek justice in the courthouse, just as we seek holiness in a house of  worship.  Justice is an ideal, a vague concept we strive for but can  barely define.  Justice is the North Star, the burning bush, the holy  virgin.  It cannot be bought, sold, or mass produced.  It is intangible  and invisible, but if you are to spend your life in its pursuit, it is  best to believe it exists, and that you can attain it.
 

 
No comments:
Post a Comment