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Shadow of Power

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The echoes of a murder reach deep into the halls of the U.S. Supreme Court in this electrifying new thriller featuring defense attorney Paul Madriani from New York Times bestselling author Steve Martini.

Terry Scarborough is a legal scholar and provocateur who craves headline-making celebrity, but with his latest book he may have gone too far. In it he resurrects forgotten language in the U.S. Constitution—and hints at a missing letter of Thomas Jefferson's—that threatens to divide the nation. Then Scarborough is brutally murdered and a young man with dark connections is charged. What looks like an open-and-shut case to most people, doesn't to defense attorney Paul Madriani. He believes there is much more to the case, and that the defendant is a pawn caught in the middle, being scapegoated by circumstance.

As the trial spirals toward its conclusion, Madriani and his partner Harry Hinds race to find the missing Jefferson letter—and the secrets it holds about slavery and scandal at the time of our nation's founding and the very reason Scarborough was killed. Madriani's chase takes him from the tension-filled courtroom in California to the trail of a Supreme Court justice now suddenly in hiding and lays bare the soaring political stakes for a seat on the High Court, in a country divided, and under the shadow of power.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Fans of Martini's Paul Madriani series may feel a little let down by his most recent book in spite of George Guidall's excellent vocal interpretation. The story involves the murder of a controversial author after the publication of his book, which links slavery and the U.S. Constitution. Guidall does his best to infuse life into some of the overlong courtroom scenes. Happily, as the story picks up, Guidall is able to exercise his vocal talents to move the action forward in a compelling fashion. His particular strength in this performance is his wry portrayal of the colorful secondary characters and courtroom witnesses who populate the book. His nuances in bringing these characters to life help make this book a satisfying listen overall. S.N.R. (c) AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 31, 2008
      Bestseller Martini's entertaining ninth Paul Madriani legal thriller (after 2005's Double Tap
      ) offers an improbable if intriguing premise. San Diego, Calif., attorney Madriani and Harry Hinds, his longtime partner, agree to represent Carl Arnsberg, a racist facing execution for the bludgeoning-by-hammer murder of author Terry Scarborough, whose nonfiction bestseller, Perpetual Slaves
      , has actually led to riots in the streets. Scarborough focused the U.S. public on the retention in the Constitution of offensive language defining African-Americans as three-fifths human, despite subsequent amendments overriding those statements. He intended to follow Perpetual Slaves
      with a sequel that would reveal the existence of a secret letter written by Thomas Jefferson whose contents Scarborough believed would prove even more incendiary. Madriani and his team race frantically to trace a copy of that letter, which disappeared from the victim's briefcase at about the time of his murder. Compelling courtroom scenes, which display a sophisticated knowledge of legal trench warfare, compensate for some less-than-credible plot twists.

    • Booklist

      May 1, 2008
      Defense attorney Paul Madriani and his partner, Harry Hinds, return (after Double Tap, 2005) in this somewhat implausible but gripping legal thriller. A writer with his eye on the best-seller list, Terry Scarborough writes a book about how the U.S. Constitution still contains the language of slavery in its text. As the national debate over the idea of a racist Constitution escalates, Scarborough is killed before hes able to drop another bomb in his next book: a letter allegedly written by Thomas Jefferson that will further deepen the racial divide. Enter Madriani and Hinds, hired to defend the accused murderer, a white supremacist who might just have been in the wrong place at the wrong time. The defense team realizes that finding that letter is the key to their clients defense. Though not the best entry in this strong seriesthe plotting is a bit disjointedthe mix of racial tension and courtroom drama combines for a suspenseful thriller.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2008, American Library Association.)

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