My voracious appetite for legal thrillers continues with the first entry into a series starring a fella named Nathan Shepherd, an attorney who has been summoned by another attorney for the criminal defense of a man who quite brutally murdered another man to defend someone else. Nathan doesn't do criminal cases, but given that he cannot resist what is offered to help out, he reluctantly joins in. It all starts out so simply, and then BAM, complications arise and now the real games begin.
As expected, it took me a bit of time to warm up to Shepherd and his author, Michael Stagg, but that's not at all an unusual thing when I switch from one series to another, especially when it's from two totally different authors. Often it's a jarring change, one that I can either grow accustomed to or one I can't adjust to. Obviously, I always hope for the former, that whatever transitons I experience can be ironed out within the first book somewhere so I'd be inclined to continue into the series.
Fortunately, I took a liking to Shepherd, It didn't happen right away, but it did happen eventually, namely when I was more allowed into his personal world with the help of his rather lovable family. It was mildly frustrating at first not to know his secrets, not knowing anything about him and how the author deliberately left things out, but once I learned that that was the point, it became easier to accept. I'm not supposed to know everything right away, and in time, I've come to prefer the bite-sized pieces.
Despite some issues I had with some of the scenes and/or character interactions closing off too abruptly, which kinda threw the momentum off kilter, I still became rather fond of the Stagg's writing style. His characters are rich and realistic-feeling, so much so that I was feeling genuine annoyance when charcters might behave a certain way. If I feel NOTHING for characters, emotionally speaking, then they're not being written right. Fortunately, the characters are written very well, many of them very likable (and unlikable, for that matter). I like when I'm so immersed in a book simply because of its characters, and this one does it very well.
All in all, this first entry won me over. Even though I didn't quite fully find the plot too believable, it was still presented in a nice, convincing manner, which I came to appreciate. I am definitely curious to continue on into this series and I hope for even better stories and/cases.