I received this book from the author (Lori B. Duff), her publisher (She Writes Press), and the fine folks at VoraciousReads.com.
This is a story that examines what happens when a "middle of the class" law student in Georgia decides that while most of her classmates try to make a go of their legal education in big-town Georgia, she is left with the choice of either struggling to make a go of it as the proverbial "small fish in a big sea" or a struggling public defender.
Jessica Fischer decides, after looking at a state law review article, to try to make her mark and build her law practice in small-town Ashton, GA with the intent that the outlying communities tend to be underrepresented in the legal community (and by a female lawyer at that!).
Fischer "inherits" a burgeoning practice when the previous principal is killed in an automobile accident and with that also inherits its lone paralegal, Diane (a widow who is struggling with her fleeting sexual attractiveness - dating younger men for a "good time" as opposed to looking for anything "long term").
While Fischer had based her decision to maintain a practice in small-town Georgia based on the amount of representation and competition, she is faced with a major downfall of how rumour and innuendo can affect her business.
She’s well on her way when the local town hero, football coach Frank “Tripp” Wishingham III, hires her to represent him in a paternity suit. Coach is everything that Jessica despises—arrogant, sexist, and entitled—but it’s her job to make him look good in public. This is made doubly difficult when her burgeoning relationship with a local reporter gets in the way of telling the truth.
Are things as black and white as Jessica thinks? And can she find a way to succeed without compromising her own personal values—or her personal life? Is she supposed to represent a client, whose comments and actions bring the "Me too" movement to small-town Georgia (but whose cheques clear at the bank) which causes her to question her morality (as a result of her decision, she loses a client)?
She finds that public opinion in small-town Georgia affects not only her professional life but her personal one, as well. She attempts to start a relationship with a local journalist (egged on by her paralegal, Diane) but soon finds struggles with a work-life balance. This raises ethical questions with client confidentiality as she worries that the journalist is only dating her to get access to information about her client.
On a scale of five stars, I would begrudgingly rate this book 3.5 stars (which rounds to four stars) as I had chosen this book based on its title and the fact that it was listed as a gripping courtroom drama. In hindsight, I found it to be more of a legal procedural (aren't semantics a hoot!). There is a market for Duff's books but it wasn't quite what I had expected.
As with all my literary ramblings, these are just a sample of my five cents worth.