From Library Journal
First-time novelist Genberg has created an astounding courtroom thriller that will keep readers on the edges of their seats until the last page. The story has all the requirements for a high-energy thriller. The main character, Michael Ashmore, finds himself in deep trouble after trying to come to his brother's aid within the corporate structure of a major airline on the verge of bankruptcy; a corporation, he discovers, that will do anything to save itself. As an attorney, Michael could be ruthless when interrogating a witness. However, he never imagined he'd one day be on the other end of the witness stand, charged with "reckless homicide" in the deaths of over 100 people in a horrible plane crash. Readers will sweat during Michael's trial. The unbearable see-sawing of hope and despair, berating of witnesses by the prosecution, and helplessness Michael feels, knowing his whole life and the welfare of his family hang by a thread in the winds of deceit and politics, keep the drama at a high peek. Readers of legal thrillers will find the book in good form. Highly recommended for all public libraries where this genre is in high demand.?Stacey Reasor, ITT Technical Inst. Lib., Tampa, Fla.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
After Brandon Air Lines pilot Charlie Ashmore's daughter dies in an accident caused by a flammable perfume, Charlie's brother Michael charges the perfume manufacturers with reckless homicide and wins a huge settlement. Swearing off the barbiturates he's abused since the tragedy, Charlie returns to flying after Michael pulls some strings. Then Charlie's first flight results in a tragic crash in which 120 passengers and crew members die. Blood tests reveal Charlie had a potentially lethal amount of phenobarbital in his system. As the damage suits take shape, the airline and aircraft manufacturer posture to deflect any responsibility, and Michael is in the awkward position of clearing his dead brother's name yet representing the best interests of his firm's largest client, Brandon Air Lines. It can't work. Michael is fired by the firm he founded, and in a nightmarish twist of fate, he finds himself on trial for reckless homicide, impaled on the legal precedent he developed in the suit with the perfume manufacturer. This is undoubtedly the best debut in the legal-thriller field since Turow's
Presumed Innocent (1987). Genberg, an Atlanta trial lawyer, has created that rarest of novels--a story that is both character and action driven. We meet Michael as a self-assured attorney, but by the last scene he sits in leg irons and a prison jumpsuit. It's a quick drop from heaven to hell, even more so when one willingly steps to the edge of the precipice.
Wes Lukowsky