This novel was a really good read. Close to 5-star, but I maintain that such ratings have to be held in reserve for those novels that really deserve it.
In the Presence of Enemies wasn't just a legal novel. It presented a helluva business scenario as well. The astute mind of the deceased as to what would happen after his death was right-on, and that wasn't only because the author made it so. The predicted scenarios were, in fact, predictable by one sufficiently knowledgeable to understand the probabilities and the psychology of the players, friend and foe alike, involved.
Further, the sub-stories were able to hold this reader's interest as well. I think that this was mostly the case because of the believablity of all the players, again, friend and foe alike.
However, I must again mention my dislike of the main character's adversary's legal tactics, as necessary as they seem to be in the modern legal world. It is this behavior by the law's practitioners that ensures that the main character of my works, Hammering Nails Can Be Murder and Felony Murder, doesn't practice. Worse yet is that the main character ends of becoming his opponent's partner. and will learn to practice the same tactics he just fought against. The main character took the partnership largely due to the money involved. This money will cause him to lose to his new partner's insistence that his tactics be followed.
The 1-star rater of this book quite correctly states that the cover blurb stated quite clearly, "He's become (her) lover,"when that never happened. All through the book, I was waiting for the truth" of this claim. In spite of many hints in that direction, and because of those hints and the cover blurb, one should expect it to have happened somewhere along the way, but nothing ever came about. The reader has been misled.
While the statement "was completely fraudulent and an absolute lie," a reader shouldn't take this out on the author, but on the publisher.