
The
Litigators
Published:
October 2011,
Doubleday
Formats:
Hardback, Audio
CD, Kindle
Hardback: ISBN-13:
978-0385535137
Pages:
400
Plot:
The partners at Finley & Figg—all two of
them—often refer to themselves as “a boutique law
firm.” Boutique, as in chic, selective, and prosperous. They
are, of course, none of these things. What they are is a two-bit
operation always in search of their big break, ambulance chasers
who’ve been in the trenches much too long making way too
little. Their specialties, so to speak, are quickie divorces and DUIs,
with the occasional jackpot of an actual car wreck thrown in. After
twenty plus years together, Oscar Finley and Wally Figg bicker like an
old married couple but somehow continue to scratch out a half-decent
living from their seedy bungalow offices in southwest Chicago.
And then change comes their way. More accurately, it stumbles in. David
Zinc, a young but already burned-out attorney, walks away from his
fast-track career at a fancy downtown firm, goes on a serious bender,
and finds himself literally at the doorstep of our boutique firm. Once
David sobers up and comes to grips with the fact that he’s
suddenly unemployed, any job—even one with Finley &
Figg—looks okay to him.
With their new associate on board, F&F is ready to tackle a
really big case, a case that could make the partners rich without
requiring them to actually practice much law. An extremely popular
drug, Krayoxx, the number one cholesterol reducer for the dangerously
overweight, produced by Varrick Labs, a giant pharmaceutical company
with annual sales of $25 billion, has recently come under fire after
several patients taking it have suffered heart attacks. Wally smells
money.
A little online research confirms Wally’s
suspicions—a huge plaintiffs’ firm in Florida is
putting together a class action suit against Varrick. All Finley
& Figg has to do is find a handful of people who have had heart
attacks while taking Krayoxx, convince them to become clients, join the
class action, and ride along to fame and fortune. With any luck, they
won’t even have to enter a courtroom!
It almost seems too good to be true.
And it is.