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413 pages, Kindle Edition
First published June 1, 2010
In The Name of Honor is one of the better legal thrillers I’ve read this year. The story centers around soldiers and PTSD, something that’s real and something the military is refusing to fully acknowledge still in 2010.
Lt. Brian McCarran is on trial for murdering Capt. Joe D’Abruzzo, a black belt in Karate, and his lover, Kate Gallagher D’Abruzzo’s husband. Brian and his sister Kate lived with the Gallagher’s, long time family friends after their mother’s suicide while their dad, GEN Anthony McCarran continued his career.
Capt. D’Abruzzo was Lt. Brian McCarran’s commanding officer in Iraq and after they both returned home, D’Abruzzo learns that McCarran had a three month affair with his wife. D’Abruzzo goes ballistic and McCarran shoots D’Abruzzo with his own gun in self-defense.
The prosecutor is out to prove that D’Abruzzo’s death was a murder concocted by D’Abruzzo’s wife and McCarran. The defense is out to prove that the murder was in self-defense due to PTSD.
The writing of the courtroom drama was superb but the best is saved for last when we learn the truth about the murder.
In the Name of Honor makes a convincing debate on how senseless this war is and how it can’t be won and how our politicians place our babies in harms way to achieve a goal that they never fully explain.