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Book review: The Lincoln Lawyer rides again

The Gods of Guilt

Michael Connelly

The gods of guilt is more than a phrase that attorney Mickey Haller — best known as the Lincoln Lawyer — likes to say when referring to a jury’s verdict. It refers to the judgments that people make about others on a daily basis, questioning their motives and dissecting their actions. But Mickey also grapples with his personal gods of guilt, knowing that sometimes being a good attorney has a price.

Michael Connelly delivers a compelling, suspense-laden plot that accelerates at high speed from the first page in his fifth outing with Mickey. The Gods of Guilt stretches the legal thriller’s boundaries, making the novel as much of a character study about a very flawed man haunted by the fact that doing his job well can have fatal reverberations. While Connelly includes the de rigueur courtroom scenes and focus on legal ethics, Gods of Guilt also works as a novel about unbridled ambition and the greed for recognition.

Workwise, Mickey’s practice has taken a turn for better so that he no longer has to rely on foreclosure cases. Personally, Mickey has become estranged from his daughter, whom he deeply loves. The teenager wants nothing to do with her father ever since a client he got off killed a family in a horrific car accident. But a new case requires all of Mickey’s attention. Andre La Cosse, a tech-savvy pimp, is accused of murdering Giselle Dallinger, a prostitute who worked for him.

The case turns personal when Mickey learns that Giselle’s real name was Gloria Dayton, a former client he tried to help. From the start, the evidence points away from Andre and toward a bigger conspiracy. Mickey galvanizes his team of investigators to sort through Gloria’s life and determine why she didn’t make a new start as she had told Mickey she would. As Mickey prepares his case, he wonders if his own actions years before somehow led to Gloria’s death.

Connelly keeps the tension high as he leads The Gods of Guilt on an edgy, labyrinthine path through Mickey’s psyche and the streets of Los Angeles. Connelly shows the daily grind of a law practice as well as the excitement of a big case. He also gives a little wink at the reader by referencing Mickey’s debut in his novel The Lincoln Lawyer and the 2011 movie that starred Matthew McConaughey. Now so many attorneys copy Mickey’s office setup in a Lincoln backseat that he often gets into the wrong car. These bits of humor don’t detract from the serious plot but add a bit of much needed levity.

Longtime Connelly readers know that Mickey is the half-brother of LAPD detective Harry Bosch. Connelly acknowledges this relationship by having Harry make about four brief but important appearances.

But The Gods of Guilt belongs to Mickey, who is as complicated as Bosch. A combination of cynic and optimist, Mickey believes in the law but is not above manipulating it. He wants to do good and be a good man, but fears he can do neither. He knows that sometimes the aftermath of his work results in a personal guilt that he can never shake.

It’s almost become a cliche to add that each novel shows why Connelly continues to be one of the best — and most consistent — living crime writers. The Gods of Guilt hands down that verdict again.


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