No Defense
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- $1.99
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- $1.99
Publisher Description
Library Journal calls Rangeley Wallace’s No Defense “a powerful first novel” that “deftly combines facts and emotions arising from a civil rights incident with the elements of a mostly dysfunctional family to create a riveting courtroom drama.”
LuAnn Hagerdorn Garrett accepts her powerful father’s offer to own and run a restaurant in her small southern hometown, ignoring her husband’s objections to the plan. Once they move, and the marriage begins to fall apart, LuAnn befriends a visiting journalist, encouraging him to seek out evidence about the town’s infamous unsolved civil rights murder. He does, but, she is shocked to learn, the evidence leads right to her father, now a candidate for Governor and her father is indicted for murder. Through the trial, LuAnn defends her father but when she is forced to confront one family secret after another she has to reassess her faith in her father as well as her views about herself and her marriage.
Publisher’s Weekly notes that “the care Wallace takes with LuAnn's characterization enhances this well-paced legal thriller, as do flavorful Southern voices and a bracing dose of romance. “ An Amazon Top 1000 Reviewer said the “atmosphere is absorbing, the story taut and the resolution a total surprise.”
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
If young mother LuAnn Hagerdon Garrett hadn't come home to Tallagumsa, Ala., in April 1978 to attend the dedication of the new courthouse (named in honor of her daddy, Newell Hagerdon, the town mayor), she never would have met Washington Star reporter Ben Gainey. And, as we learn in this generally compelling first novel by a former attorney, if she hadn't told Ben about the racial killings back in 1963, her father never would have been put on trial for murder--and just after announcing his candidacy for governor, no less. On the day of the dedication, Newell surprises LuAnn with the deed to the local steakhouse. Over the protests of her prideful husband, Eddie, LuAnn, pregnant with twins, insists that they move back to Tallagumsa. In time, Eddie takes a job at the local college and LuAnn takes up with Gainey, who has remained in town to write a book about the New South. Then Gainey gets his hands on FBI memos about the murders of two young men slated to be the first black students at an Alabama college, who were purportedly gunned down by then-Sheriff Newell Hagerdon. But because the only witness to the killings was the town drunk, the Bureau had backed off. Now Gainey has revived the case and Newell is on trial. Despite the long buildup, the courtroom scenes, even with Hagerdon family secrets finally revealed, are a disappointment. But LuAnn's belated understanding of her father's selfishly manipulative behavior and her ensuing insights once she finally achieves maturity are cogently explained. In fact, the care Wallace takes with LuAnn's characterization enhances this well-paced legal thriller, as do flavorful Southern voices and a bracing dose of romance.