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Mortal Allies

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
JAG lawyer Sean Drummond has gotten himself in way over his head—with a case that challenges his deepest fears and a co-counselor who challenges just about everything else. Assigned to South Korea as an advocate for a gay officer accused of brutally killing the son of a South Korean war hero, Drummond is teamed up with an old law-school nemesis. Katherine Carson is a curvy, liberal, William Kunstler–like attorney with a reputation for manipulating the media on behalf of her mostly gay clients. Drummond is as distraught to be working with a woman who knows how to push all his buttons as he is to be defending this client. However, it's just this lack of political correctness that makes him the one man the CIA can trust with its disturbing secrets, and Drummond quickly learns that what appears to be an open-and-shut case is really just the top layer of a deep conspiracy.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Sean Drummond and Katherine Carson fought so much in law school that the faculty decreed they not be allowed in the same building. Now they're thrown together in a Korean court case defending a homosexual Army captain accused of brutal crimes against his lover. Scott Brick exploits every possible opportunity to showcase the humor in Haig's pseudo-thriller, performing the highly intelligent but emotionally inept Major Drummond with a hilarious realism that can only come from experience. His portrayals of corrupt government officials, angry lesbians, jaded CIA agents, and a surprisingly complex accused killer round out the listening experience. R.P.L. (c) AudioFile 2003, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 13, 2002
      A relentless fusillade of surprise and humor drives this unusually jocular military/legal thriller set in Seoul. When the soldier son of South Korea's defense minister is raped and murdered by an American soldier, career military Judge Advocate General Maj. Sean Drummond is yanked from a Bermuda beach to serve as co-counsel at the request of brilliant civilian defense attorney and gay/lesbian legal activist Katherine Carlson. Bitter rivals in law school and complete political opposites, these two bash heads on a case that is anathema to army brass, sparks Korean riots, ignites gay activist and right-wing religious groups, sets off a media frenzy and fuels a push to get U.S. troops out of South Korea. JAG officers are unloved at best, but Drummond is despised and sabotaged on all sides as Carlson plays puppet master by fueling his ego and baiting the brass. Facing the army equivalent of a hanging judge, corrupt Korean police and devious CIA actions, Drummond fears for his client's future—and his own. Haig's hero (back in action after his turn in Secret Sanction) cracks wise with refreshingly derogatory humor, skewering diplomats, bleeding hearts, religious nuts, military homophobes and gay activists alike while skillfully untangling the issue of gays in the military. Korean culture and the country's North/South divide play an important role in the novel's denouement, as Haig successfully kindles his powder keg of a plot. Agent, Luke Janklow. (May)Forecast: This is the second novel in a projected series featuring Drummond. The first,
      Secret Sanction, has been optioned by Intermedia Films with Nicholas Cage to star as Drummond. If the film comes off, Haig (son of former secretary of state Alexander Haig), could reap substantial sales.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

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  • English

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