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With Prejudice

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

No one knows what happened that night. Seven strangers must decide.

Earl Thomas, a straight-laced taxman with his fair share of police encounters, is the begrudging foreperson in a high-stakes trial in Miami. Laura Hurtado-Perez is a physician whose unassuming manner conceals a private pain. Joseph Cole is the founder of his local neighborhood watch, unduly obsessed with the families around him.
Along with four others, these jurors of varying ages and walks of life whose paths would likely never have otherwise crossed must come together to make one of the most important decisions of their lives.
On the night Melina Mora, a free-spirited woman both proud and kind, was murdered, she was seen with a young man of Gabriel Soto's description. Two strands of her hair were found in his bedroom. Sandy Grunwald, a young prosecutor whose political ambitions depend on securing a conviction, finds herself pitted against Jordan Whipple, a preening public defender armed with a freshly discovered, dynamite piece of evidence on the eve of the trial—if the Honorable Darla Tackett will admit it.
What Sandy, Jordan, and Judge Tackett all know, however, is that the criminal justice system is complicated, and everyone has a story—especially the jury. And it's their experiences, biases, and beliefs that will ultimately shape the verdict.
With striking originality and expert storytelling, Robin Peguero's debut novel explores the prejudice that hangs over every trial in America. You've never read a legal thriller quite like this. There's never been a thriller writer quite like Peguero. And you will not be able to predict how it all ends.

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    • Kirkus

      March 15, 2022
      A murder trial in Miami reveals ugly secrets in the criminal justice system. Told mostly through courtroom dialogue and flashbacks, this debut legal thriller follows the trial of Gabriel Soto, who has been charged with killing a woman he met in a Miami bar. But this book has higher ambitions, too. A former homicide prosecutor and current congressional investigative counsel, author Peguero wants to shine a light on the inequities and prejudices that influence the outcome of every trial. The story unfolds from the points of view of myriad characters: the attorneys using every trick they can to secure a courtroom victory; the jurors who must decide Soto's fate; and the witnesses and experts called to testify, who come to the stand with their own secrets and biases. From the start, Peguero reveals how each individual's past shapes the eventual verdict. An example: The foreman had an unpleasant encounter with a racist police officer that will influence his vote--though not in the way his fellow jurors suspect. This is a creative idea, but it comes at the expense of a compelling narrative focus. Some characters are little more than sketches, while others are cartoonishly drawn, such as the prosecutor, who orders a detective to pretend to assault her because she needs to feel what the victim felt. Meanwhile, she's sleeping with the reporter covering the trial, who offers to hold a big story for her (Peguero at least switches the usual genders of this clich�). The dialogue too often lapses into pronouncements during casual conversation. At one point a reporter actually says, "I am in the business of seeking out truth." Peguero eventually wrestles the story back to the question of Soto's guilt or innocence, but by then the damage is done. Addressing racism and injustice in the U.S. legal system is admirable, but the author too often forgets what makes a legal thriller work. An ambitious legal thriller about racism and injustice that loses its focus.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 28, 2022
      Gabriel Soto, the defendant in Peguero’s unimpressive debut, is on trial for abducting, raping, and killing Melina Mora, despite Mora’s body never having been found. The prosecution, led by Sandy Grunwald, an irritating type A lawyer, hinges its case on forensic evidence, principally strands of Mora’s hair found in Soto’s home on a farm in Homestead, Fla. Shortly before trial, a surprise discovery on the defendant’s hard drive—a trove of exclusively homosexual porn videos—gives Soto’s attorney new hope for acquittal by arguing that a man who had no sexual interest in women must be innocent, and forces Grunwald to regroup. Her manic trial prep, which includes asking the main police investigator to reenact Grunwald’s theory of the crime by pinning her down with his body on a table in Soto’s home, is too over-the-top to make her credible. Unrealistic courtroom scenes, as when Grunwald attempts to rehabilitate a witness on redirect with unobjected-to leading questions, don’t help, nor does awkward prose (“Like refracting mirrors set up to face one another, their gorgeousness multiplied exponentially”). Legal thriller fans can safely take a pass. Agent: Michael Nardullo, Levine Greenberg Rostan Literary.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

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  • English

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