Access Instantly Judicial Whispers Conceived By Caro Fraser Displayed As Paper Copy
Leo leads something of a double life, keeping his sexual proclivities far from chambers, but a chancer with a big mouth is ready to talk, Rumours are flying and Leo is prepared to do whatever it takes to quash them so that he can take silk, becoming a member of the Queen's Counsel, Will lawyer Rachel Dean be his ticket, and is he callous enough to use her as such
Anthony went on a few dates with Rachel, who decided she preferred Leo, for complex and sensitively portrayed reasons.
Anthony's head nearly explodes with cognitive dissonance when Leo and Rachel get together, An enjoyable read, will be reading the next one to see what the lusty lawyers are up to, The Law of diminishing returns, . . CW: Sexual assault. Both for the book, and for the remainder of this review, Also moderate spoilers.
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The Pupil, the book before this in the Caper Court series, contained a lot of infidelity, lowkey misogyny and very amoral lawyers, so I wasn't expecting wholesome content here, but this book is basically crammed with sexual harassment and sexual assault.
Rachel Dean is the new main character introduced in this book, the first female lead, and I actually liked her for the most part, but not only is sexual assault a major part of her backstory which has led her to become sexrepulsed, which was actually kind of interesting, tho poorly handled and treated like a personal issue to be overcome at all costs in order to become normal but she's sexually assaulted three times within the course of the book, and none of these three occasions are actually treated as assault.
The three occasions:
, A main character kisses her, She pushes him away, saying "don't", He basically grabs her and keeps on kissing her very aggressively until she screams, This is treated as an awkward event and mostly her own fault,
. A minor character follows her into an alley while she's on drugs and kisses her, This is interrupted by another major character and treated as a bad thing, but
, The major character takes her back to his apartment and after a discussion of

her dark past, has sex with her while she is still on drugs and not in a fit state to consent.
This turns out to "cure" her sex repulsion,
So that was all very disgusting, There were other instances of sexual harrassment and assault in the novel tooRachel's secretary is being harrassed by a man working at her law firm, for exampleto an extent that it just kind of permeates the book.
The one time we see consequences is when Rachel's secretary's boyfriend shows up at a party and beats the man harrassing her so badly he has to go to the hospital.
Which was kind of cathartic, Now if he could just do that to the two main male characters of the book, I might be somewhere near satisfied,
Ughghghghghghgghghghgghghgh.
The sad thing is, there were still things I liked about this book, The writing style is enjoyable, I didn't mind Rachel and Leo's fucked up relationship apart from how it began because it was clearly meant to be seen as a fucked up relationship, and Leo is basically a terrible person so you expect it from him.
Anthony and Leo's relationship, while now mostly background, is still compelling but they've now both committed sexual assault so it's really hard to like them, and I thought Rachel's secretary was really fun.
Part of me still wants to continue the series, to see how things work out with all these complicated and honestly pretty bad relationships, But the parts of this book that were bad, were VERY bad and honestly disturbing, and I don't know if the rest of the series is likely to be the same or not.
Because I had no clue there was going to this much sexual assault in this book either,
I'm going to have to think about it, An easy read my guilty pleasure Oddball mix of snobbery, frigidity, class uppermidlow, homosexuality, poverty, manipulation, blackmail, Achilles' heels abound throughout the social structures and moralities of the leading players, Rumors and hidden agendas run rampant, as protagonist barrister Leo Davies reaches for his personal brass ring, "to take the silk, " Of the four main characters, only the flakey, dingleberry assistant Felicity openly displays her true personality, while Leo, Anthony, and Rachael cloak their true identities/ambitions and dark pasts in socially acceptable behaviors.
The pretentious personalities of Leo and Anthony, plus judges/court members, became dull reading, Thankfully outrageous Felicity added some muchneeded spark, This is the second book from the caper court set, it's one of them books that you can take it or leave it, This one is set on Leo Davies and his past catching up with him, got a bit juicey near the end, I have to say I really enjoyed this book, It is such a page turner, I was up till nearlyam!! A good holiday read I suppose, I like books that show me a world I know nothing about, and these Caper court books do that wondefully that's part of the escapism, I also quite like flawed characters, and there are several of those, Leo especially, there are, moments I can't stand him, yet he is always interesting, Even Anthony Cross there were moments I didn't like him much that callow youth thing, mixed with a slight arrogance I don't really like, although overall he is likeable, and I look forward to seeing him develop over subsequent novels.
I thought Leo's trip to Wales for Christmas was quite poignant too, I also loved the hapless Felicity I am glad she ended up at Caper court, I was especially pleased that I enjoyed this so much because the first book in this series left me slightly cold, I wanted to love it so i could go on and enjoy the series I was probably slightly keener in my review of it than I really felt that's how much I wanted to love this series of books.
Well now I am on track because I enjoyed this so much I can't wait to read the next one which I have already on mnt tbr,
A world about which I knew very little, just the movie and TV cliches, I can honestly say that I had no idea how it would pan out until the last few pages, A rumor campaign threatens to thwart London barrister Leo Davies's hope of election to that rarefied strata of the British legal hierarchy, the Queen's Counsel, The rumors are based on truth, for Leo's sex life is hardly conventional, In a typical mystery novel, such a scenario would lead to blackmail or murderor both, But Caro Fraser's new novel is neither typical nor a mystery, All of the drama in this character study of a fascinating protagonist comes from Leo's interior struggle with issues of sex, love, class, and ambition, The real mystery is how erroneously this book has been cast as a legal thriller,
Advised that the best way to scotch the rumors is to take a wife, Leo becomes involved with Rachel Dean, a beautiful and emotionally rigid solicitor who has good reason to be so guarded.
That Leo's close friend Anthony also covets Rachel might initially strike readers as an unnecessary diversion, but Fraser brilliantly uses the men's relationship to illuminate Leo's complicated sexual nature, which is enacted in his courtship of Rachel and his almost inadvertent wakening of her sexual passion.
"There's too much fear in you," Leo says when Anthony charges him with using Rachel to further his own ambitions, "Don't you remember Or don't you want to remember There are things you don't want to confrontthings about Rachel that you'll never understand, You're empty. You're devoid of anything that could help her, because you've never been to that part of yourself where you find out things, the best and the worst, But you're young. You'll learn. " Leo's journey through the tortuous landscape of his own mental inferno makes for compelling reading in a sophisticated and engrossing novel, Jane Adams