This is one of the best, if not the best, biographies I have ever read. Evan Thomas takes an interesting subject, famous trial lawyer Edward Bennett Williams, and makes him come alive in this book. The book moves with the speed of a good novel and Thomas paints a portrait of an interesting, charming, complex, and flawed man. This book is as much about D.C. culture from the 1940s through the 1980s as it is about Williams, for Williams was a pivotal figure in D.C.'s growth from a sleepy southern town to a city of energy and power. Williams truly was the man to see. He could make potential indictments disappear, he counseled presidents and politicians, was friends with writers and editors. He was a daily Mass-goer who had a ribald sense of humor. A committed father and husband who in his early years strayed a bit. I highly recommend this great book. A modern masterpiece.