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Book Description
He gave up the money. He gave up the power. Now all he has left is the law.
Michael Brock is billing the hours, making the money, rushing relentlessly to the top of Drake & Sweeney, a giant D.C. law firm. One step away from partnership, Michael has it all. Then, in an instant, it all comes undone.
A homeless man takes nine lawyers hostage in the firm's plush offices. When it is all over, the man's blood is splattered on Michael's face--and suddenly Michael is willing to do the unthinkable. Rediscovering a conscience he lost long ago, Michael is leaving the big time for the streets where his attacker once lived--and where society's powerless need an advocate for justice.
But there's one break Michael can't make: from a secret that has floated up from the depths of Drake & Sweeney, from a confidential file that is now in Michael's hands, and from a conspiracy that has already taken lives. Now Michael's former partners are about to become his bitter enemies. Because to them, Michael Brock is the most dangerous man on the streets....
Amazon.com
Looking for a romantic, hardboiled legal drama with a social conscience? Look no further. This audio version of John Grisham's blockbuster The Street Lawyer is narrated by Michael Beck (The Golden Seal, Xanadu), whose portrayal of the similarly named Michael Brock, with his squeaky-clean voice and crisp annunciation, is in perfect pitch with the corporate attorney's Ivy League image. Beck's believable, engaging performance is compelling, drawing the listener into Brock's charmed life and his decision to quit the firm after being held hostage by a disgruntled homeless man. Moved by a crisis of conscience, Brock seeks out the gravel-throated, streetwise legal aid counselor Mordecai Green. Green shows him the ropes, and Brock soon becomes part of the scenery he used to look down on from his plush 14th-floor office. Meanwhile, our hero is on the lam for stealing an important file that holds the secret to an illegal eviction--one that may lead to a murder charge. Faced with a failing marriage, a client on crack, and the threat of disbarment, Michael has plenty to think about as he and Mordecai negotiate a fair settlement for the victims of an inexcusable crime. (Running time: 360 minutes; 4 cassettes)
From Publishers Weekly
America's most popular author is arguably its most popular crusader as well, tilting his pen against myriad targets, including big law (The Firm, etc.), big tobacco (The Runaway Jury), big insurance (The Rainmaker) and now, in perhaps his sweetest, shortest novel, against anyone, big or little, who treats the homeless as less than human. The expected powerhouse opening involves the hostage-taking?by an armed, homeless man who calls himself Mister?of nine attorneys of a huge law firm headquartered in D.C. Among the nine is narrator Michael Brock, an antitrust lawyer who receives a faceful of blood when a police sniper blows away Mister's head. "I'm alive! I'm alive," Michael cries like Ebenezer Scrooge, but, like Scrooge, this greedy hotshot is ripe for a moral awakening. The next day, Michael visits the shabby offices of Mister's attorney, Mordecai Green, who explains that Mister and others had been illegally evicted from makeshift housing on orders from a real-estate development company represented by Michael's firm. Inspired by Green and shaken by his firm's complicity, Michael volunteers at a homeless shelter. When a family he meets there dies on the street, and turns out to have been among the evictees, Michael quits his job, goes to work for Green and, using as evidence a file he steals from the firm, aims to sue his former employer on behalf of the evictees. In turn, the firm places Michael in its crosshairs, pressuring him to give up the file through legal maneuvers, having him arrested and hints of darker means. The cat-and-mouse between Michael and the firm is vintage Grisham, intricately plotted, but the emphasis in this smoothly told, baldly manipulative tale is less on action and suspense, which are moderate, than on Michael's change of heart and moving exploration of the world of the homeless. Dickens would be well pleased, and so will Grisham's fans. 2.8 million first printing.
From School Library Journal
YA-Michael Brock, a successful young attorney for a large, prestigious law firm in Washington, DC, is taken hostage by a homeless veteran in the dramatic opening chapter of Grisham's newest novel. In an effort to understand the motives of his assailant, who dies as the hostages are freed, the young man volunteers at a soup kitchen and works at a legal-aid society. There he begins to recognize the plight of the homeless. However, serious questions remain as to the role Brock's firm had in evicting Mister and other homeless people during a cold winter. In an effort to delve into this mystery, Brock steals a file, thus cutting himself off from friends and his former way of life. The author's reputation assures the popularity of The Street Lawyer, and it is an excellent choice for teens as the plot is relatively simple and fast moving. However, those readers hoping for as much excitement or suspense as there was in The Firm will be disappointed. Michael's transformation from greedy attorney to a sympathetic social worker is gradual and credible. Other characters are not as well developed. As Grisham includes many statistics and other relevant information on the homeless, this is an good choice for sociology students.
Claudia Moore, W. T. Woodson High School, Fairfax, VA
From AudioFile
A high-powered lawyer leaves a Washington, DC, firm to practice "street law." Unlikely, but Grisham has concocted a believable story that may signal that his latest bestseller has something more to say to his readers than legal maneuvering and intrigue. Michael Beck does an admirable job with the abridged edition, giving an especially appealing voice to homeless advocate Mordecai Green. The story is a great choice for recording as it unfolds in deliberate storytelling style and doesn't have too many characters or scene shifts. THE STREET LAWYER is a departure from Grisham's norm and is highly recommended for great listening. R.F.W.
Book Dimension
length: (cm)17.3 width:(cm)10.7
I completed reading The Street Lawyer yesterday. It took me more than 7 months to read it through. Perhaps you are readingmy mind that I am, sort of, lazy man and such reading took so much time. Maybe you are right to form such opinion. But one thing for su...
评分I completed reading The Street Lawyer yesterday. It took me more than 7 months to read it through. Perhaps you are readingmy mind that I am, sort of, lazy man and such reading took so much time. Maybe you are right to form such opinion. But one thing for su...
评分I completed reading The Street Lawyer yesterday. It took me more than 7 months to read it through. Perhaps you are readingmy mind that I am, sort of, lazy man and such reading took so much time. Maybe you are right to form such opinion. But one thing for su...
评分I completed reading The Street Lawyer yesterday. It took me more than 7 months to read it through. Perhaps you are readingmy mind that I am, sort of, lazy man and such reading took so much time. Maybe you are right to form such opinion. But one thing for su...
评分I completed reading The Street Lawyer yesterday. It took me more than 7 months to read it through. Perhaps you are readingmy mind that I am, sort of, lazy man and such reading took so much time. Maybe you are right to form such opinion. But one thing for su...
我的阅读体验是,这本书像是一部节奏紧凑的交响乐,每一个声部(人物线索)都演奏得恰到好处,最终汇聚成一曲震撼人心的高潮。它最吸引我的地方在于,作者似乎对人性的弱点有着近乎残酷的洞察力,笔下的人物无一不是在欲望、恐惧与责任之间拉扯挣扎。我欣赏它那种近乎冷酷的客观性,它不急于评判,只是冷静地展示事件发生的必然性。这种叙事策略让读者不得不自己去填充情感的空白,去判断是非曲直,极大地增强了阅读的主动性。特别是那些关于谈判和周旋的场景,文字的交锋火花四溅,那种步步为营的心理博弈,比任何直接的肢体冲突都来得更为精彩和紧张。这本书的结构处理得极其巧妙,看似散乱的片段,最后却能严丝合缝地拼接到一起,揭示出更宏大的图景。我很少能在一本书里同时体验到如此强烈的智力挑战和情感共鸣,简直让人欲罢不能,一口气读完之后,那种意犹未尽的感觉久久不散。
评分这本书的文字功底令人叹服,它不仅仅是在讲述一个故事,更像是在编织一张极其精密的社会网络图谱。我感觉自己仿佛被这位叙述者拉着,穿梭于光鲜亮丽的办公室与阴暗潮湿的后巷之间,那种强烈的代入感,让我对故事中人物的动机有了更深层次的理解。作者对于场景的渲染能力极强,你几乎可以闻到空气中弥漫的紧张气味,感受到权力斗争带来的窒息感。更难能可贵的是,它没有陷入刻板的二元对立,书中的“好人”有其阴暗面,而所谓的“反派”也闪烁着复杂的人性光辉。这种对灰色地带的精准把握,使得整个故事的张力达到了一个极高的水准。我特别喜欢它处理法律程序的部分,那种严谨的逻辑推演和对程序正义的探讨,让人在阅读刺激情节的同时,也能感受到智力上的满足。总的来说,这是一部需要全神贯注去阅读的作品,它回报给你的,是远超一般娱乐小说的思想深度和艺术体验,读罢掩卷长思,发现自己对许多既有观念都产生了动摇。
评分这本书的叙事节奏简直让人坐立难安,从翻开第一页起,就被那种错综复杂的人物关系和层层递进的阴谋紧紧地攥住了。作者对于细节的捕捉极其敏锐,无论是街头巷尾的市井百态,还是高耸入云的权力中心,都被描绘得栩栩如生。我尤其欣赏作者在构建冲突时所展现出的高超技巧,那种看似不经意的对话,实则暗藏玄机,每一步都像是精心布局的棋局,让人不得不放慢速度,反复咀嚼其中的深意。故事的主线虽然清晰,但其间穿插的那些关于人性挣扎与道德困境的支流,却极大地丰富了作品的内涵。它不像某些作品那样直白地给出答案,而是更倾向于将问题抛给读者,引发我们对于正义、救赎以及个体在巨大体系面前能发挥多大作用的深刻思考。读完后劲十足,甚至在接下来的几天里,我还会不自觉地在脑海中重温那些关键的转折点,试图去理解那些晦暗角落里隐藏的真相。这本书的语言风格是那种老派的、沉稳的大气,充满了对社会结构和法律体系的深刻洞察,读起来酣畅淋漓,绝不是那种可以轻松翻过去的小说。
评分坦白说,起初我有点担心故事会因为主题的严肃性而显得沉闷,但事实完全出乎我的预料。作者用一种非常现代和富有活力的笔触,将严肃的主题包装得引人入胜。这本书的语言风格变化多端,时而如同精准的外科手术刀般冷静犀利,时而又变得充满情感的温度,尤其是在描绘角色内心深处的挣扎时,那种细腻入微的心理刻画,简直让人拍案叫绝。我特别关注那些关于社会边缘群体如何在这个体制中求生存的描写,那种底层视角的介入,为整个故事增添了厚重和真实的质感,避免了让故事沦为仅仅是精英阶层的权力游戏。阅读过程中,我多次为角色的选择感到揪心,因为他们面对的每一个抉择都没有“正确答案”,只有不同程度的妥协和牺牲。这本书的魅力在于它的“真实性”,它让你相信,在权力与法律交织的迷宫里,真相往往是残缺不全,需要付出巨大代价才能窥见一斑。这是一部能让人在阅读结束后,依然愿意拿起笔写下自己的思考的佳作。
评分这部作品带给我的震撼,更多地来自于其主题的复杂性和叙事视角的不断转换。我感觉自己像是在一个万花筒前,每转动一下,看到的景象都不同,但所有的碎片都指向同一个核心的议题:在制度的庞大阴影下,个体良知如何自处。作者在处理不同社会阶层的对话时,语言的切换自然流畅,仿佛是为每个角色量身定做,这使得人物的立体感非常强,没有一个是扁平的符号。那些法律术语的运用,非但没有使人感到枯燥,反而像是一层层剥开洋葱的步骤,让你一步步接近核心的矛盾。我尤其欣赏它对“效率”与“正义”之间永恒矛盾的探讨,这种辩证的思考贯穿始终,让读者无法轻易站队。这本书的魅力在于它的多义性,不同年龄、不同阅历的读者可能会从中读出截然不同的感悟。它不仅仅是一部精彩的小说,更像是一份对当代社会运行逻辑的深刻解剖报告,引人深思,值得反复品味。
评分流浪汉劫持为虎作伥的讼棍 被警察击毙 一位前程似锦的青年律师因此顿悟 走上扶危济困的公益律师之路
评分又臭又长,我说你丫啥好呢?还纽约时报畅销书第一名。
评分情节并不高明,叙事啰嗦重复,视角有问题(第一人称叙事者竟然有全知视角我也是醉了)。至于道德内涵,我很庆幸叙事者没有盲目盘踞道德高地。这不是一个富人律师洗心革面变成义工圣人的故事,而是年纪轻轻人生迷茫需要靠社会服务事业填补空虚的弱者立足故事。叙事者试图为自己的偷盗行为洗白,但作者没有这样做。还有,叙事者志愿帮助的人们,不是纯粹的被侮辱和被损害的,他们何尝没有背负罪恶。小说没有把社会问题等同于道德问题,这点处理得不错。
评分一般
评分又臭又长,我说你丫啥好呢?还纽约时报畅销书第一名。
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