Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Dismas Hardy #5

The Mercy Rule

Rate this book
Justice...

Once Dismas Hardy was a cop. Now he spends his days in a lawyer's suit, billing hours to a corporate client in a downtown San Francisco office. Hardy's wife and kids like it that way. Then one client changes everything.

Compassion...

Graham Russo, a former baseball star, is charged with murdering his dying father. Was it suicide, the last desperate act of a dying man? Was it murder? Or mercy?

Murder...

Now, as a carnival of reporters, activists, cops, lovers, and families throng around the case, Dismas Hardy is going to trial with a client he doesn't trust, a key witness he cannot believe, and a system that almost destroyed him once. For Dismas, this case will challenge everything he believes about the law, about his family, and about himself. Because a chilling truth is beginning to emerge about an old man's lonely death. And what Dismas knows could put him next in line to die. . . .

640 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published September 8, 1998

744 people are currently reading
1095 people want to read

About the author

John Lescroart

142 books1,299 followers
John Lescroart (born January 14, 1948) is an American author best known for two series of legal and crime thriller novels featuring the characters Dismas Hardy and Abe Glitsky.

Lescroart was born in Houston, Texas, and graduated from Junípero Serra High School, San Mateo, California (Class of 1966). He then went on to earn a B.A. in English with Honors at UC Berkeley in 1970. In addition to his novels, Lescroart has written several screenplays.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
1,170 (34%)
4 stars
1,499 (44%)
3 stars
600 (17%)
2 stars
76 (2%)
1 star
13 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 186 reviews
Profile Image for Paul Weiss.
1,464 reviews543 followers
November 9, 2023
An already dying man strolls through death’s door a little earlier than expected! Natural death, suicide, assisted suicide, or capital first degree murder?

Fans of John Lescroart could certainly be forgiven for picking up THE MERCY RULE expecting a suspense or legal thriller. After all, that’s how Lescroart rolls and his body of work speaks for itself. But, for my money, it’s much more accurate to describe THE MERCY RULE as comparable to a Jodi Picoult work in which some “issue” is raised, explored and addressed with a provocative plot that simply puts questions before its readers and leaves them to mentally explore the options to find the answers for themselves. Well, maybe, maybe not!

In this case, the issue is the right to a dignified death in the face of terminal disease or incurable injury, pain, suffering, and the loss of dignity; the deterioration of the mental capacity for self-determination; the ethics and legality of assisted suicide; the question as to whether assisted suicide is legally murder, in fact, first degree murder and possibly subject to capital punishment; and, of course, the intransigent response from organized religion that assisted suicide flies in the face of the plans of a deity whose wishes are not subject to mere human opposition.

An interesting presentation of the opposing sides of the question:

First, assisted suicide was presented as a “liberty interest issue, not too dissimilar to abortion. Provided, of course, you’ve got cruise control … CRUIS – competent, rational, uncoerced, informed, stable.”

And then there is the typical opposition to suicide or assisted suicide from a zealous, dogmatic Christian community:

There is “great caring, great love, great sacrifice, and great nobility in the face of death. But the end of pain is a blessing from God, and ministering to that end is the true meaning of Christianity.” Or (in my considered opinion, even worse and, frankly, quite disgusting) the sanctimonious Mother Theresa approach which sees virtue, blessing, and even good fortune in the pain and suffering inflicted by an all-knowing God, “suffering was part of life. It had a purpose. It ennobled and strengthened the sprit, especially when offered up to the glory of God.”

No prizes for guessing which side of the issue I found myself cheering for as a compelling trial drama unfolded in the novel.

THE MERCY RULE is a long novel – indeed, a door-stopper by most any reader’s standards. If you’re looking for the “suspense” or the “thrills” of a typical suspense or legal thriller, my guess is you’ll be disappointed and find the novel unduly long or even dragging. If you let it be an exploration of a pertinent 21st century issue, it’s a sure-fire winner.

Paul Weiss
Profile Image for ElaineY.
2,449 reviews68 followers
January 27, 2017
REVIEW OF AUDIOBOOK; JANUARY 26, 2017
Narrator: David Colacci


I liked this for the most part but found it overly long - 18 hours! It could have been shortened without affecting the plot, IMO.

I did enjoy Dismas investigating the case against Graham and I found his wife, Frannie's interaction with Dis refreshing. She's smart, independent, and supportive towards her husband - something, at the start of the book, Dis doesn't seem quite aware of. So Frannie surprised me in a pleasant way because most writers tend to give their MCs a shrew. I like it when Glitsky makes an appearance though I haven't read/listened to any of his books in his own series.

What did pull me out of the story was the amount of money involved. A mere 50,000 dollars, yet all that drama. Then again, it involved Graham's family members and we all know what happens when relatives get involved.

I couldn't guess the killer and the identity came out of left field, for me. That cost the book a star. I like Colacci narrating the series (most of the current 16 books) and that helped me get through the 18 hours. I like long audiobooks but 18 hours is too much for a murder investigation. Action thrillers are okay so I hope the rest of the series is more manageable, lengthwise.
1,759 reviews21 followers
April 12, 2009
I have been a fan of John Lescroart since the first book of his that I read. I like the idea of having characters which recur in subsequent books--even ones like Dismas Hardy and Abe Glitsky, who are at times seriously flawed.

This is probably the longest of his novels, and quite entertaining with many twists and turns. The villains are villanous, and the hero not always heroic.
Profile Image for Marty Fried.
1,234 reviews126 followers
June 24, 2016
Another winner by Lescroart. Not quite as happy an ending as some of the previous ones I've read, but it all seemed to turn out OK in the end. A bit of a surprise at the end, which seems common for his books.
Profile Image for Tammy.
2,237 reviews81 followers
May 4, 2020
The Mercy Rule took a little too long in the groundwork and introduction, though enjoyable, to the main course. The issue of assisted suicide in the trial is interesting. The trial is fairly entertaining, though.
Profile Image for Joel Ungar.
414 reviews9 followers
September 29, 2013
This is the second Dismas Hardy novel I've read (possibly the third - see below) and I will be reading the rest of the series. The characters are wonderful - flawed and human. I read too many books where all of the characters are almost superhuman - the men were at the top of their classes and the women aren't real. Dismas Hardy is real - loves his family but seems to love his career more. He has deep friendships, and sometimes he pushes them to the limits.

The book touches on assisted suicide, hence the title, but in the end stays noncommital, as it should. The book, at its heart, is a legal thriller, and one that was hard to put down.

I said earlier this is the second one I've read. I think I might have read a third either before I was on Shelfari, or when I was lazy and not updating my shelf. I'm hoping I'm wrong on having read a 3rd, because that means one less to enjoy!
Profile Image for Tim.
2,497 reviews329 followers
February 9, 2013
Although this story is much longer than necessary, the last 1/3 saves it from becoming a disaster. This is a rescue Houdini would be proud of. 7 of 10 stars
Profile Image for Chris.
592 reviews1 follower
July 12, 2019
What a great book! It’s a well crafted combination of legal drama, police procedural and insights about the realities of the bureaucracy that governs the system. This is the 5th entry in a series but, while it’s helpful to know the background of the characters by reading the series in order, I think this could be easily read independently of the other books. While this is a different author with a different writing style, it reminds me of the quality of a Michael Connelly book and that’s high praise from me.
262 reviews3 followers
October 17, 2022
Dismas Hardy does not want another murder trial, but Graham Russo has gotten under his skin and he can't shake it off.
After being estranged from his father for years Graham and Sal have reconciled. But Sal is now battling advancing Alzheimer disease and an inoperable brain tumor.
Now Sal is dead and the coroner is not sure if it is suicide or murder. Did Sal kill himself, did Graham help him or did he murder him for the money and baseball card collection in his safe.
A well written thought provoking book. I look forward to reading more of John Lescroat's work.
419 reviews42 followers
December 10, 2018
I have read at least seven of the Dismas Hardy books and this series has been very enjoyable.

This book continues the winning streak. I really enjoy Lescroart's writing style. His books are detailed and you need to read carefully to follow all the little clues hidden here and there. I don't want to say more because of spoilers, but this is a great addition to the Dismas Hardy series. They can be read out of order as each stands alone.

Highly recommended for fans of legal thrillers.
2,109 reviews7 followers
May 5, 2012
This older John Lescroart novel finds Dismas Hardy defending another lawyer who is accused of killing his dying father. When the district attorney fails to prosecute a politically ambitious State Attorney steps in sending an assistant with a grudge against the defendant to prosecute. As usually with Lescroart lots of twists and turns and good legal action leaving you up in the air on how the case will turn out and who is the killer.
Author 4 books127 followers
July 27, 2019
In rereading Lescroart I'm reminded about how topical his legal thrillers are--this is right to die--and how determined he is to solve the crime, not just get his client off. Investigative, good dialog, SF zeitgeist. And always a pleasure to listen to David Colacci.
Profile Image for Sheila.
539 reviews2 followers
February 21, 2019
Interesting and satisfying read. Lescroart is a good writer. I would definitely recommend this book. It is based partly on assisted suicide and murder filled with courtroom drama.
Profile Image for Byron Washington.
732 reviews4 followers
March 16, 2020
Good Tale!!

Reading John Lescroart was something like a palate cleanser. I needed a break from books about love, romance, angst and all of the rest that evolves from that four letter word. Just a good old murder/mystery coupled with extensive courtroom drama and backroom politics, and Lescroart, Dismas Hardy and Abe Glitsky ALWAYS deliver.

Buy it, read it and enjoy!!👍🏾🔥👍🏾🔥👍🏾🔥👍🏾🔥👍🏾🔥

Profile Image for Ginny.
1,417 reviews15 followers
January 2, 2022
I loved the treatment of Sal Russo, the victim, in this story featuring Dismis Hardy. Sal had Alzheimers and a brain tumor, in order to cope he wrote down everything he wanted to remember from phone numbers to his 3rd grade teacher. Although estranged for many years, near the end Sal and his older son become best friends, now the son is accused of killing his father. Was if murder for profit, mercy killing or is the son totally innocent. To make matters even more interesting, the son has made enemies of many people in the legal community.
Profile Image for Hans Brienesse.
293 reviews4 followers
November 7, 2022
I found this an entertaining read. It was quite gritty in it's depiction of the courtroom dramas both in the courtroom itself and also out of it. There was a refreshing lack of the "superhero" element that seems to plague a lot of modern novels and everything that was found out was a logical progression. An unexpected but delightful twist at the end.
71 reviews1 follower
March 4, 2020
I thoroughly enjoyed Mercy Rule. I’ve been a Lescroart fan for quite a while. I’d recommend this as a good quick read!!
Profile Image for Donald Peschken.
336 reviews3 followers
April 8, 2020
Probably the best legal thriller I've read. Very thought provoking about the issue of assisted suicide. Great story with a lot of suspects but was it murder or suicide?
Profile Image for Sridhar Babu.
206 reviews6 followers
December 20, 2017
AUTHOR: JOHN LESCROART

CHARACTERS: Dismas Hardy, Graham Russo,Sal Russo,Abe Glitsky, David Freeman, Sarah Evans,Gil Soma, Art Drysdale, and Dean Powell

LOCATION: SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA STATE ((USA))

GENRE : THRILLER ...

PLOT
Graham Russo, a former baseball star, is charged with murder of his dying father Sal Russo. Was it a suicide, the last desperate act of a dying man? or just mercy killing...!!!The autopsy report confirms that the cause of death is due to morphine overdose ,injected by syringe.

Graham Russo was arrested by detective inspector Sarah Evens, was charged with Murder-robbery, after a thorough search made by the detective inspectors. It was found in the search that Graham had deposited 50000 dollars and a collection of baseball cards from the early 1950s worth another many more thousands belonging to his father, in his safe deposit box of Wells Fargo Branch Bank, soon afrer his father Sal's death. It was also discovered in the investigation that Graham know the number combination of his father's safe vault, from a letter written by Sal Russo.

Graham Russo earned his living by playing baseball and softball matches. He switched jobs constantly. He was law student ,started his career as a clerk in a reputed law firm,left that job after few months. He was also a trained paramedic,skilled in giving injections.

Dismas Hardy, hates to be a criminal defendant lawyer.He feels that the hectic nature of the job will steal him away from his wife and two children. He, therefore spends his days in a lawyer's suit, a luxurious accommodation at the law office of David Freeman, in a downtown San Francisco office, billing hours to a Corporate client.

The death of Sal Russo and the arrest of Graham changes everything.After couple of meetings with Graham at his residence and later in jail, Hardy feels that Graham is wrongly convicted man and agrees to be his defense lawyer.

Dismas Hardy asks Graham to plead guilty, so that he can gey to his life after few years of imprisonment, but Graham rejects Hardy's advice and tells him firmly that he was innocent and loved his father very much.

Now, as a carnival of reporters,activitsts,cops,and families throng around the "Sal Russo case" Dismas Hardy is going to defend Graham Russo against a tough prosecution team led by Attorney General Dean Powell, Art Drysdale and Gil Soma.

THE TRIAL

Arguments of the PROSECUTION TEAM led by Dean Powell, Art Drysdale and Gil soma before the Jury and Judge Jordan Salter:

" Graham Russo, murdered his father Sal Russo for money. Graham Russo on 9th of May came to his father's apartment,killed his father with an injection of morphine took 20000 dollars from the safe and fled...
Sal Russo , the defendant's father was indeed suffering from Alzheimer's disease and from brain cancer. There may be evidence that on some days the defendant Graham might have come to his father's apartment to administer morphine to help Sal deal with his pain, but on that particular day Graham came not as a healer, but an assassin and thief..."

The prosecution team also brings professional witnesses before the Jurors to testify Graham was a trained paramedic,skilled in giving injections that he had constant access to syringes and in fact provided by the syringe that was used in this fatal injection. The prosecution team calls Fargo Bank's teller to testify that on the very afternoon of Sal's death,the defendant Graham placed in his own deposit box a sum of fifty thousand dollars and a collection of baseball cards from the early 1950s worth another many thousands more to show the defendants desperate need for money.

Finally, by calling the detective inspectors ,who investigated the homicide, the prosecution makes them to testify the lies Graham told to them and his motive, killing his father out of greed for money and baseball cards kept in his safe.The prosecution team rests its argument by accusing Graham as a cold blooded murderer.

Arguments of DEFENSE TEAM lead by Dismas Hardy and David Freeman before the Jury and the Judge..!!!

"Graham Russo cared for his father,protected and loved him. It is an obscenity that he has been charged with murder.Graham was indeed a regular visitor to his father's apartment. He went to administer shots for Sal's pain,but he also went there to visit,take his father to dinner,to organise and clean and help with the laundry. Graham did this for more than two years and frequently in the last six months.

Graham had his father's money as per his father's instructions and deposited in his bank vault on 8th may itself,a day prior to Sal's death.Sal's doctor had given him a form called DNR, stands for "Do not resuscitate" kinda medic alert bracelet that instructs paramedics to let a person die if that is nature's course.Sal had his DNR sticker out when he was found. No murder for money was done, no murder at all. The prosecution cannot prove that Graham Russo killed his father, he is innocent"

Defense Attorney Dismas Hardy by taking a bold stance and by ignoring the great majority of evidence presented by prosecution team and by intelligently cross examining the prosecution witnesses John Strout the doctor,Philip Parini the crime scene specialist, Sarah Evans the detective inspector andbank Manager Mrs.Li, painted his own picture of Graham,the sincere and devoted son who found himself in agonizing dilemma of his father's terminal illness.

The jury and the judge believed Hardy and gave a verdict of Graham's acquittal,by pointing that Graham did nothing wrong.

WHO KILLED SAL RUSSO...

During his meeting with Graham at his apartment and in jail, Hardy remembered Graham telling the last wish of his father. Sal wished his funds, entire 50000 dollars and amount derived by selling the baseball cards should go to an woman named "JOAN SINGLETERRY '. But there was no telephone number or address mentioned in Sal's belongings. Even though Hardy placed advertisements both in local and national newspapers the address was not traceable . Hardy was both confused and puzzled regarding Sal's connection to this Joan woman.

Before his death, on every Fridays Sal Russo sold Salmon fish to his customers, who were judges and police lieutenants. Because of the quality of the fish Sal supplied, he was fondly mentioned as "Salmon Sal" by his close friends.Sal owned a boat moored right behind the federal court.

One of Sal Russo's oldest and best friend was Mario Giotti, a well known federal judge in San Francisco. During his younger days Mario worked in his father's hotel named Grotto, back in the kitchen. Mario was also a young attorney with political aspirations. Hotel Grotto was having a very tough time,was suffering heavy losses. Giotti family received a notice from State of California, that the hotel should be properly renovated, because of the hotel's poor standard to meet out the needs of the tourists. The family needed forty-five thousand dollars to bring the place to the code prescribed by the State or the hotel would be shut down.

Mario Giotti and his best friend Sal came up with a smart idea. If there was a small fire in the kitchen, doing a little damage to the hotel, the insurance cost can cover the renovation. Mario and Sal thought the fire could never spread, with its backup and alarm systems. Unexpectedly because of the grease in the kitchen the fire spread fast, burning the entire hotel. In an attempt to put down the fire, a fisherman named Randall G.Palmieri, dead on the spot. Randall was a sweet faced young guy,with two kids and pretty wife Joan.

Out of sympathy towards Randall's wife Joan Palmieri, Judge Giotti helped her to run the family out of Trust fund, established by his family. Joan, later married Ron Singleterry,lived a peaceful life till her death.The judge also gave Sal Russo 50000 dollars out of gratitude and guilt, mainly to keep him shut.

Hardy learns these matters from Joan's daughter, who responded after seeing Hardy's advertisement. Hardy also interrogates judge Giotti after finding a leather hose,from Sal's belongings,first he mistook for belt and learning about the burnt down Hotel Gorotto,from the paper archives.

Judge Giotti's wife Pat Giotti, wants her husband to reach great heights in his career . She wants her husband to be a Supreme court judge without any hindrances.

Sal Russo became a great threat to her wish.Because of his Alzheimer's disease and cancer, he forgot that his son had taken his 50000 dollars as per his instructions . Sal began to yell and threaten the judge if he didn't give his money back, Sal will declare in public the tragic incident happened in Hotel Gortto,and their roles to hide the death of an young fireman.This, made the judge restless, even though he had confidence over his best friend.

So, Pat Giotti to help her husband, and to wipe away the blabbing Sal Russo who was posing a great threat to her husband, killed him with morphine overdose by visiting Sal's apartment secretly.

Pat ,also wanted to stop Hardy who was constantly digging Mario Giotti's past even after Graham's acquittal. Meeting ,Hardy at gun point,while he was working late. at his office,Pat narrates the entire truth to Hardy and leaves him with bullet injuries. She was arrested and sentenced six years jail at County prison.

As per his father's wish, Graham donates Sal's entire funds to Joan Singleterry and joins as law associate in David Freeman's office. Graham marries Sarah Evans,the detective inspector who had a soft corner towards Graham and firmly believed right from the beginning, he was innocent,

MY COMMENT

MERCY CODE...GRIPPING PAGE TURNER.
187 reviews2 followers
October 31, 2021
I wasn’t entirely happy with the ending but Lescroart as usual is very readable.
Profile Image for Steve.
775 reviews21 followers
March 12, 2023
I've read this book before, but it's been years. Long enough that I could not remember the plot or the bod guy. Great book as all of the Dismas Hardy books are....also just a little long...as all the Dismas Hardy books are. You really do have to read them in order and everyone matures, but a very good series that I haven't kept up with and need to re-read before I start catching up.
Profile Image for Pisces51.
764 reviews53 followers
April 18, 2021
THE MERCY RULE [1998] By John Lescroart
My Review Four Stars****

Dismas Hardy returns as the featured protagonist in Book 5 of 19 at the time of this writing (Spring 2021). Frankly, I am surprised that I opted to read still another chapter of Diz Hardy’s life and times so doggone soon, having previously read THE VIG in February (which I did enjoy quite a bit), followed by HARD EVIDENCE, and then THE 13TH JUROR early last month. Nevertheless, I was ready to become immersed in the time and the streets of San Francisco in the late 1990’s.

It has been three years since the events that occurred in THE 13th JUROR, and Hardy is 45 years old. Dean Powell, the prosecutor Diz had defeated at the 11th hour in the previous book, is now the State Attorney General. In another twist, his former mentor the quick witted and likeable Art Drysdale is also in the State Attorney General’s Office following a “shake-up” in the San Francisco DA’s Office. The black DA hard on crime in the city was voted out of the DA’s Office in favor of an ultra-liberal white female replacement named Pratt. Hardy’s close friend is the Head of the Homicide Division, and the reader learns that Abe has lost his beloved wife to the ravages of cancer in the time interval since HARD EVIDENCE. It has always been my stance that any book series will ultimately be more fulfilling and enjoyable if the reader starts at the beginning and reads the novels in chronological order. That is true of Lescroart’s Dismas Hardy series as well, but I will concede that THE MERCY RULE could be read as a standalone. Lescroart manages to inject a significant amount of the back story on Dismas Hardy.

The reader learns the essential facts about Hardy’s back story and finds out that Hardy is once again “sleepwalking” his way through life. He is killing himself putting in hours billing a corporate client, distancing himself from both his wife and family. Diz found himself caring too much and his fear made him pull away from his family and criminal law (everything he loved). Hardy recognizes that he needs to straighten up and embrace life without fear and start living it. The larger-than-life Defense Lawyer David Freeman from the prior novels is there to give Diz some reality orientation as well. An old acquaintance from his days at the Shamrock arranges to see him for legal advice, but this meeting is only a precursor to Hardy’s decision to embrace criminal defense again start preparing to be Defense Counsel for the highest profile case in his life.

The title of the book is derived from a phrase that was tossed out during a heated interchange between the homicide squad and the new DA Pratt. A man’s death is ruled by the Medical Examiner as “equivocal” with no definitive finding of suicide or homicide. The son is arrested prior to the DA’s Office making the decision to move forward with prosecution. DA Pratt tosses it out, decides not to pursue the victim’s son for either assisting his father to commit suicide or alternatively injected morphine into his dad’s vein to end his pain and suffering.

“So you’re saying that from now on in cases like this, the DA decides we don’t need a jury trial to get at the facts? And what do we call this, ‘the mercy rule’?”

Interestingly enough, an alternative definition to “The Mercy Rule” is later offered up in the novel, a sport’s term as it so happens.

I would venture to say that (THE MERCY RULE) is Lescroart’s longest novel (636 pages). That’s funny of course because the agonizing length of Lescroart’s storylines has been my principal complaint in two out of the three of his books preceding this one. By the 50% mark in the novel, the author had pretty much laid the groundwork and made all of the introductions to the characters. I approached this book knowing that it was going to be a character-driven story with “oodles” (as Hannibal would say) of character development, tons of entertaining and enjoyable dialogue, and of course populated with a colorful cast of characters both old and new. I must say that reading the novel at a leisurely pace, just taking time “to smell the roses” has staved off any boredom and impatience that I might have previously felt to “just get on with it”. Let’s face it, in Lescroart’s world “That ain’t gonna happen”. He is masterful with creating believable three-dimensional characters and writing snappy, gripping social discourse.

THE MERCY RULE was originally published in 1998, and only available in eBook format much later, the Kindle Version dated June 2019. In any case the novel didn’t appear to “knock the ball out of the park” on Goodreads with 2,487 Ratings resulting in an overall score 4.03. That represented only 30% of readers awarding 5-Stars. Amazon painted a different “tale of the take” with an impressive 4.5, but the sample consisted of only 261 overall ratings.

I finished the novel last night and I was gratified to see that my feelings are not far from those of “the maddening crowd”. Recently it’s like I have been an outlier when I post book reviews. Anyway, THE MERCY RULE deserves a solid four stars in my opinion. The second half of the book provided some sensational courtroom drama, in part because of the subject matter and the uniqueness of the defense strategy, but largely due to the incredible talent that Lescroart exhibits with character development. Yes, there are a LOT of pages, but the reader also learns to know the entire constellation of colorful characters who populate the book. The concept of death with dignity, and the topics of assisted suicide and euthanasia are put on slides under a microscope. It is impossible for the reader to avoid contemplation of these heavy issues. I found it interesting that San Francisco, the country’s hotbed of liberalism, was unable to legitimize or legalize assisted suicide in the late ‘90s and it remains illegal in all states of the union over two decades later. But the novel is a murder mystery at its core, and it isn’t until after the climax of the trial and the jury’s verdict rings out loud and clear that the murderer is revealed. I thought I had it all figured out from the bread crumbs of clues that were provided throughout the long narrative, but there was the one last plot twist I didn’t anticipate. Overall, this admittedly LONG novel is really more than pretty good. It’s an emotionally sprawling epic well worth the time that you invest.
509 reviews9 followers
August 6, 2014
The story has many ideas: assisted suicide, right to life, care for the elderly, betrayal, and lust for power. Most of the characters react in some way to these concerns. Further, Dismas Hardy adjusts himself to married life with children and at the same time realizes he is a defense attorney rather than a prosecutor. I like the realistic way the recurring characters change a little to adapt to their circumstances.
15 reviews1 follower
September 16, 2009
My mind wanders when I'm reading this book ... character development not what it should be. Perhaps that will change ... I'm 100 pages into the book -- and it's taken me over 2 weeks to get to that point ... not a good sign for me who can polish off a book in a couple of days.
Profile Image for Kirsty Darbyshire.
1,091 reviews56 followers
Read
December 7, 2010
I think I'd better mark this one done as "abandoned", I just can't get into the story at all. I like the premise, I just don't find myself wanting to read this book.
175 reviews
Read
March 30, 2012
I liked this book. It was well done and was thought provoking.
Profile Image for Asghar Abbas.
Author 4 books201 followers
November 20, 2020

California Sunshine. Know it so well, only too well. But here it does ask a valid and interesting question.
346 reviews
August 3, 2023
I really like this book a lot until the ending. Then it felt like somebody else wrote the ending and stuck it on. It went from being a law and order kind of courtroom drama to a superhero.
I read this book for a mystery book club. In the beginning of the book we meet, Sal a guy who is becoming increasingly demented and has a brain tumor. We learned that he had been estranged from his three children, but his eldest son, and he have reconnected.
His oldest son is arrested for having murdered Sal, although most people think that he probably died with the help of his son through assisted suicide.
The sun is trained as a lawyer, gave up a clerkship to pursue baseball, went nowhere with that, and has had difficulty getting a legal job. He plays illegal baseball for cash. He’s a terrible interview when the police come to talk to him and tells a lot of repeated lies, which makes them suspect him. There’s $50,000 involved in some baseball cards which makes them say and charge him for murder With special circumstances. Why I gave this a fairly high rating is because I love courtroom dramas, and the vast majority of this book takes place in the quart room. They go deep in the testimony in the strategy, and I love all that. Ultimately the prosecution does a terrible job of proving anything, and the jury is reluctant to convict a son who truly loved his dad. So they don’t. There’s a lot of drama also about assisted suicide and whether it should be legal or illegal. About 80% of the way through the book the son is acquitted. However, dangling with his lawyer is the fact they believe that someone did murder him. It just wasn’t the sun. And this is where I think the book takes a bad turn. The lawyer independently starts looking for who it could be. Ultimately pointing the finger at a judge who had been in the book. I did think the books was setting it up to be the judge. But the fact that the lawyer confronted him directly was just downright silly. The exchange of a five dollar bill in order to find out what really happened was contrived. And then there was the twist where it was actually the judges wife, who had killed Sal. She was worried that with his dementia he would eventually blow the cover on the fact that 20 years ago he and the judge had been involved in a fire that burned down the judges dad’s restaurant and led to the death of a fireman. There’s a really crazy scene with the judge‘s wife and the lawyer And a gun. Both end up shot but live. The lawyer’s wife is going to get a very mild sentence. At the very end, the judge is shunned by restaurant workers at Fishermans wharf. Really who cares. This would’ve been a much better book. Had they just ended right after the son got acquitted and left a dangling who actually killed Sal.
Profile Image for James Thane.
Author 10 books7,069 followers
January 15, 2025
This is the fifth entry in John Lescroart's Dismas Hardy series, following The 13th Juror, which is the book that really put the series on the radar of a lot of crime fiction fans. Hardy, who was once a cop, then a prosecuting attorney, has now settled into his role as a defense attorney, even though the time required by the job is putting a strain on his relationship with his wife, Frannie.

As the book opens, an aging fisherman named Sal Russo is found dead in his dingy San Farncisco apartment. Russo was suffering from Alzheimer's disease and from terminal brain cancer, and it initially appears that he decided to end his own life by injecting himself with a fatal dose of morphine. Upon closer examination, though, the police conclude that Sal may have been murdered.

The police tag as their suspect Russo's son, Graham. For years, the elder Russo had been estranged from his family, but over the last couple of years he and Graham have reconnected. The two have become close again and Graham has been assisting his father through the elder man's medical difficulties as best he can.

The police ultimately conclude, though, that Graham killed his father, not to ease Sals' suffering, but rather so that he could steal a large sum of money and a very valuable baseball card collections that belonged to him. Hardy agrees to defend Graham against the charges, but the younger Russo does himself no favors by lying repeatedly to the police and to his own attorney.

The most intriguing part of the book is its exploration of assisted suicide and the question of whether or not it should be a crime to help a loved one die, especially when the person is terminally ill and has repeatedly said that they would rather die than go on living. The courtroom scenes are very well done and it's fun to watch Dismas Hardy thread his way through a very complicated case. This is a fairly long book, but it keeps you turning the pages and looking forward to Hardy's next case.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 186 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.