Sunday, October 18, 2009

Mystery Book Review: The Hidden Man by David Ellis

Mysterious Reviews, mysteries reviewed by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books, is publishing a new review of The Hidden Man by David Ellis. For our blog readers, we are printing it first here in advance of its publication on our website.

The Hidden Man by David Ellis

by
A Jason Kolarich Mystery

Putnam (Hardcover)
ISBN-10: 0-399-15579-1 (0399155791)
ISBN-13: 978-0-399-15579-6 (9780399155796)
Publication Date: September 2009
List Price: $25.95

Review: Edgar Award-winning author David Ellis introduces his first series character, attorney Jason Kolarich, who is coerced into defending his childhood best friend accused of murder, in the elegantly crafted legal thriller The Hidden Man.

Kolarich is retained by a "Mr. Smith" to defend Sammy Cutler, accused of murdering the man who he believed abducted and killed his 2-year-old sister 27 years ago. Smith has no obvious connection to Sammy, but has the financial resources to get, and keep, Jason's attention. The only requirement: the trial must begin within 4 weeks. Jason doesn't believe he can do it, and starts to get creative with Sammy's defense. Smith doesn't agree with Jason's tactics, and applies pressure on Kolarich to "stick to [his] role", as if he's merely a bit player in a crime drama. That pressure initially takes the form of framing Jason's brother Peter for dealing drugs, but when Jason gets him off, Smith kidnaps Peter and threatens to kill him. Jason doesn't understand why Smith, and whoever he's fronting, is determined to get Sammy tried so quickly -- "Why did they wait until one month before his trial to show up? And why are they so concerned about this trial happening on schedule?" -- but concludes there must be some history here ... maybe as far back as the murder of Sammy's little sister.

Much of the strength in The Hidden Man comes from Jason's character, his role as a defense attorney, and the strategies he employs to win the case against his client. He's quite pragmatic about it, as shown in this passage from early in the book:

Much of what we do, to a layperson, is counterintuitive. A guy gets caught with a kilo of cocaine in his basement and the first thing we argue is that the evidence should not be admitted, because of a Fourth Amendment violation. A guy confesses to a crime and the first thing we argue is that the jury shouldn't hear the confession, courtesy of the Fifth Amendment. We try shaky defenses like temporary insanity or play the race card, anything plausible to free our client. People will carp and moan about every single attorney on the face of the earth except for one -- their own, if they ever need one, in which case their view of the Bill of Rights becomes infinitely more expansive.

Despite the odds against him, Jason proceeds on his independent path to free Sammy. "I was a competitor," he says. "I wanted to win and I enjoyed the thrill of battle." It's a thrill of a ride for the reader, too.

The only minor quibble here is the frequent detours into Jason's past. He blames himself for not being a better brother to Peter, a better friend to Sammy, and a better husband and father to his wife and child, who were recently killed in an car crash. True, these backstories add depth to Jason's character, and obviously have a profound impact on how he's managing his life today, but the point is abundantly clear the first few times it's made; it doesn't need to be repeatedly emphasized.

Still, the character of Jason Kolarich and the elegance of the plot elevate The Hidden Man to the top tier of legal thrillers. The twists the case takes are unexpected, the misdirection subtly introduced, and the conclusion brilliantly conceived. It is strongly and enthusiastically recommended.

Special thanks to Penguin Group for providing an ARC of The Hidden Man for this review.

Review Copyright © 2009 — Hidden Staircase Mystery Books — All Rights Reserved

Buy from Amazon.com

If you are interested in purchasing The Hidden Man from Amazon.com, please click the button to the right. The Hidden Man (Kindle edition) is also available. Learn more about the Kindle, Amazon's Wireless Reading Device.

Synopsis (from the publisher): Jason Kolarich is a midwestern Everyman with a lineman’s build and an easy smart-ass remark. He’s a young, intelligent maverick, but he’s also struggling with an overwhelming emotional burden—one that threatens to unravel his own life, and possibly the lives of those around him.

Twenty-seven years ago, two-year-old Audrey Cutler disappeared from her home in the middle of the night. She was never found. All the detectives had to go on were vague eyewitness accounts of a man running down the Cutlers’ street, apparently carrying someone. Without enough evidence to suggest otherwise, Griffin Perlini—a neighbor with prior offenses against minors—was arrested, but never convicted.

The case is long closed when Perlini is murdered nearly thirty years later. Now a man named Mr. Smith appears in Jason Kolarich’s office, saying only that he represents a third party who wants the man charged with murder off the hook and that Kolarich is perfect for the job. The new client: Audrey Cutler’s older brother, Sammy—Kolarich’s estranged childhood best friend—a man he hasn’t seen in nearly twenty years.

But when Kolarich starts receiving violent threats from Mr. Smith’s enigmatic employer, he figures out that the secrecy behind this nameless third party—and the key to winning Sammy’s case—is entangled with the mystery of Audrey’s disappearance. With his own life and Sammy’s in the balance, Kolarich has to put aside not only the mounting anxiety of the job but also a heart-wrenching personal tragedy in order to find out what really happened to Audrey all those years ago.

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