Presumed Innocent
A Gripping Legal Thriller from the Godfather of the Genre - Soon to be a Major TV Series
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- 2,99 €
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- 2,99 €
Descripción editorial
Now a major TV series from Apple TV+ starring Jake Gyllenhaal
'Scott Turow is master of the legal thriller' – The Guardian
From the godfather of the legal thriller, Presumed Innocent by Scott Turow is a gripping, internationally-bestselling courtroom drama about ambition, weakness, hypocrisy and justice.
Carolyn Polhemus was an assistant prosecuting attorney, intelligent and full of promise. When she is found dead – assaulted and strangled – the curtain is pulled on a dark, tangled web of sex, corruption and betrayal.
Before long, prosector Rusty Sabich stands accused of her murder. He was having an affair with Carolyn – the motive seems clear-cut. With no one to trust, it is up to Rusty to uncover the truth behind this deadly crime – and prove his innocence in the process . . .
Praise for Scott Turow:
'Head-and-shoulders above others in the legal thriller genre he created' – The Observer
'A brilliant chronicler of contemporary America' – The Sunday Times
'Turow does legal thrillers better than anyone else' – Irish Independent
'Worthy to be ranked with Dashiell Hammet or Raymond Chandler' – The New York Times
'No one writes better mystery suspense novels than Scott Turow' – Los Angeles Times
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Chicago defense attorney Turow, formerly a U.S. prosecutor, capitalizes on his intimate knowledge of the courtroom in an impressive first novel that matches Anatomy of a Murder in its intensity and verisimilitude. With the calculating genius of a good lawyer (and writer), Turow, author of the nonfiction One L, draws the reader into a grittily realistic portrait of big city political corruption that climaxes with a dramatic murder trial in which every dark twist of legal statute and human nature is convincingly revealed. The novel's present tense puts the reader firmly in the mind of narrator Rusty Sabich, a married prosecuting attorney whose affair with a colleague comes back to haunt him after she is brutally raped and murdered. Sabich's professional and personal lives begin to mingle painfully when he becomes the accused. His is a gripping and provocative dilemma: "Sitting in court, I actually forget who is on trial at certain moments. . . . And once we get back to the office, I can be a lawyer again, attacking the books, making notes and memos.'' Turow's ability to forge the reader's identification with the protagonist, his insightful characterizations of Sabich's legal colleagues and the overwhelming sense he conveys of being present in the courtroom are his most brilliant and satisfying contributions to what may become a literary crime classic. 125,000 first printing; $125,000 ad/promo; movie rights to Sidney Pollack; Literary Guild dual selection; author tour.