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The Fifth Witness

A book by Michael Connelly

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"The Fifth Witness" is a weak effort at best

  • Jul 11, 2011
Rating:
-2

In what is arguably the weakest book in a series that began with “The Lincoln lawyer” criminal defense attorney Michael Haller takes on the murder case of Lisa Trammel.

 

Lisa Trammel was already a client for Haller’s exploding business of stopping foreclosure. It is not work Haller likes but the criminal stuff was in short supply due to the bad economy. That same hideous economy created a huge foreclosure business caseload and that has kept things goings for his law practice. Abandoned by her husband and with a nine year old son, Lisa had come to him desperate to save her three bedroom house from being taken in foreclosure by Westland Financial. Lisa has not been the best client Haller could have wanted. Instead of quietly sitting back and letting Haller do the work in court, Lisa has become a publicity hound. She started a grass root internet campaign against those involved in the foreclosure crisis, led demonstrations outside the bank, and in general has refused to take direction from Haller while annoying him with constant questions involving the strategy of her case and other issues.  Among many of her targets is Mitchell Bondurant senior vice president at Westland Financial.

 

In charge of the mortgage loan mess at Westland Financial, his name is on all of Haller’s court paperwork. As far as Haller knew, Lisa Trammel did not know Bondurant and was obeying the restraining order the bank had gotten by staying away from their property. Now the man is dead in a parking garage and Trammel has been arrested for murder. As in earlier books in the series, Haller continues to preach his philosophy that in his role as defense attorney he does not care if his client is innocent or guilty and does not want to know. He does not want anyone involved on his legal team to “grow a conscience.”  The job of the defense is to plant enough seeds of doubt with the jury during trial, if it gets that far, that the jury will not find his client guilty. Innocence or not has nothing to do with the case or his actions.

 

In between defending Lisa Trammel and discovering dirt on others involved, Haller spends a large portion of the book lecturing on the foreclosure crisis currently still gripping the nation. One sided at best, such ranting lectures will no doubt polarize readers as well as pad the word count while stopping the story dead in its tracks. These information dump rants are numerous and repeatedly kill any movement of the story forward while also greatly over simplifying the situation. Story momentum is also frequently stopped dead by Haller’s constant self-references as well as public statements to others on his team that as a defense attorney he does not care if his clients are guilty or innocent. A theme that has been hammered to death for several books now.

 

A theme that is also blasted apart in the last dozen or so pages when Haller does something so unbelievable it creates a laugh out loud moment for many long time readers of this series. The result is a read that is average at best and one that is far below the good quality novel readers expect from the very talented Michael Connelly. While an average read created by Michael Connelly is far better than a lot of what is out there these days, this book is a real disappointment as the author can and has done so much better in the past.

 

One hopes this is not a sign of things to come where this author is weakened by the current state of publishing today that demands major name authors to crank out multiple books in multiple series faster and faster. That short sighted publishing philosophy weakens the quality of books in general and harms readers in the long run.

 

The Fifth Witness: A Lincoln Lawyer Novel

Michael Connelly

Little Brown and Company

2011

ISBN# 978-0-316-06936-6

Hardback—Large Print Version

664 Pages

$29.95

 

 

Material supplied by the good people of the Plano, Texas Public Library System.

 

 

Kevin R. Tipple © 2011

Author of the short story “By The Light Of The Moon” in the anthology CARPATHIAN SHADOWS VOLUME 2 available in print and e-book formats. Details at http://kevinrtipple.com/

 

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July 16, 2011
I just started to read this book, and, already, I agree with you. I've just flipped through one rant about mortgages, and another page-long description of what a mortgage is.... this is not adolescent literature so this isn't necessary. I like the Bosch novels much more than the Lincoln Lawyer series. The narrator here seems to describe the legal process almost like a list, and doesn't engage me. He says the same thing over and over. If Mickey told the client ONE MORE TIME not to talk to the press, I would have stopped reading and found another book. Then again, I might...
July 16, 2011
Depending on where you are, there could be five more descriptions of the process. I warn you--he does bring up the not talking to the press thing several more times. I like the Bosch books so much better too. I just kept thinking IT HAS to get better. I hope it does for you.
 
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More The Fifth Witness reviews
review by . September 03, 2011
Mickey Haller is having a tough time finding paying clients so he's advertising for people having difficulty with foreclosures. He longs for being back in court where he's at his best.      Then he gets a call from a client that she's been arrested for murdering the banker heading up the mortgage division responsible for foreclosure actions on her home.      As the case progresses and comes to trial, we follow the court scenes which are well described …
review by . March 25, 2011
This engaging courtroom thriller is by far Mr. Connelly’s best Lincoln Lawyer tale to date! This time Mickey Haller has jumped on the foreclosure bandwagon and is servicing clients who are about to lose their house. One of those clients is Lisa Trammel who has started a protest group that against her bank that garners national attention.      When the Bank Officer servicing Lisa’s loan is murdered, Lisa is the prime suspect and it is up to Mickey to defend her. Through …
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Kevin R. Tipple ()
Ranked #151
My stories have appeared in such magazines such as “Lynx Eye,” “Starblade,” “Show and Tell,” and "The Writer's Post Journal" among others and online at … more
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Wiki

Mickey Haller has fallen on tough times. He expands his business into foreclosure defense, only to see one of his clients accused of killing the banker she blames for trying to take away her home. 

Mickey puts his team into high gear to exonerate Lisa Trammel, even though the evidence and his own suspicions tell him his client is guilty. Soon after he learns that the victim had black market dealings of his own, Haller is assaulted, too--and he's certain he's on the right trail. 

Despite the danger and uncertainty, Haller mounts the best defense of his career in a trial where the last surprise comes after the verdict is in. Connelly proves again why he "may very well be the best novelist working in the United States today" (San Francisco Chronicle).
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Details

ISBN-10: 0316069353
ISBN-13: 978-0316069359
Author: Michael Connelly
Genre: Mystery & Thrillers
Publisher: Little, Brown and Company
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