Leigha
Written on Jul 8, 2020
It’s been a long, long, LONG time since I’ve read any legal thrillers. I picked up Defending Jacob because I loved Grover Gardner’s narration for Stephen King’s The Stand. It helped that Chris Evans is playing the lead role in the Prime adaptation (although I’m not sure if I’m interested enough even in him to watch it). Gardner’s narration is pitch perfect for the material. It’s a book made for listening.
Reading legal thrillers always reminds me of how little I truly know about the courtroom and/or investigation process. I could not tell you whether this story is factually correct. However, in some ways, its authenticity does not matter – it felt real and understandable to me. The story switches from the present to the past almost effortlessly in an audio format. It was fascinating guessing whether or not Jacob was innocent or guilty (and why the main character, Andy, was on the stand).
It ended rather abruptly much to my displeasure. No closure is available to the reader or to Andy. It felt like the author just stopped caring about his characters, sacrificing long character arcs for the sake of ending his story. It’s still worth the read as, in some ways, this story is more about the journey rather than the ending.
tl;dr A fascinating legal thriller focused on an interesting story, but the ending felt rushed with no real answers.