"Terrific Rumpole legal thriller"
Horace Rumpole looks back to just after graduating from
Oxford to work his first legal case. Five decades ago
Rumpole bit his acerbic tongue to defend a client Simon
Jerold accused of a double murder, that of his father and
a friend using a pistol taken from a deceased World War II
German aviator. The evidence seems overwhelming and the
legal fraternity shies away from defending the accused as
no money can be made. Stunned by the reaction of his
peers Rumpole dives into the defense with idealistic zeal. Rumpole quickly learns that the jurisprudence system is a
haven for corrupt barristers trying to squeeze pounds out
of helpless and at times innocent criminals. He drops the
gloves applying his saber wit on opponents as he defends
his client with his belligerent in your face manner. He
will use that technique for the next five decades
defending the downtrodden against powerful opponents
except Hilda Wyston who he has just met through her father
and quickly becomes known as "She Who Must Be Obeyed". This is a terrific Rumpole legal thriller that fans of the
series will fully treasure due to the documenting of his
first case referenced in many of the short stories. The
deep support cast consists of "felons" from all sides of
the legal systems, family members, and lest we forget the
client. Though newcomers will feel aspects of the case
and the protagonist's background seem missing (a tendency
to rely on references in other books), readers will find
pleasure with the character driven case that fans have
wanted for seemingly almost as long a time as the hero
looks back. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted November 28, 2004
SummaryNow more than ever, thousands of readers delight in the
adventures of Horace Rumpole, but despite the publication
of more than one hundred stories, his early years have
remained shrouded in mystery—until now.
In Rumpole and the Penge Bungalow Murders, John Mortimer
tells the story of Rumpole's very first case. Looking back
a half century into a very different world, Rumpole recalls
a man accused of murdering his father and his father's
friend with a pistol taken from a dead German pilot. It was
this trial and its outcome that put Rumpole on the map and
began to shape him into the eccentric and cantankerous
defender of justice and reciter of poetry readers know and
love. Rumpole and the Penge Bungalow Murders is a must read
for every Rumpole fan and a compelling invitation to new
readers to get to know Mortimer's addictive barrister.
|