I sometimes like to read legal dramas, I have watched all the hundreds of episodes of the TV series Suits.
I didn't like The Street Lawyer, I was expecting some twist along the way, and waiting for a big trial in the end, but pressure doesnt really build up and the ending is a short settlement (sorry if that's a spoiler).
The story is predictable from the beginning if you read the information on the cover slap, you know pretty much everything. A rich corporate lawyer has an awakening and decides to get rid of his wealth and help the poor for a very small salary. Instead of designer suits he now wears jeans and cuts onions in homeless shelters. He turns against his former law firm defending a bunch of illegally evicted poor in a nasty lawsuit, but to do so he had to steal a file which puts him in a position where he is threatened to lose his law license and get arrested.
The author paints a picture of 1990's Washington D.C. as a place where the poor and the criminal are abundant, where people are afraid of driving through certain neighborhoods and government social programs are cut back all the time.
I giggled when reading how different some things were back before we all head cell phones with internet and cameras and files had to be faxed and copied, and newspapers bought at the break of dawn, obviously I remember this world, but it's easy to forget how recently these things changed.
Although 300 something pages, it reads very quickly. The characters are caricaturist and little profound, one-dimensional. Either good or bad, not much more to it. My issue with the ending is that is little credible and a bit cheesy.
The Street Lawyer is an easy read, seems like a book for English-learners. I used less neurons reading the novel than I would use scrolling on you phone, therefore even in a work charged week I was able to read a chapter in the morning and a chapter at night.
This is my second John Grisham read. I know this genre is the type
of bestsellers sold in train station shops, I don't remember which other novel
by Grisham I have read, I was maybe 18 years old at the time, but it
was a legal drama as well and for the vague memories I have of it it was a lot better than that one.
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