My rating:

Amazon ebook and
Whispersync audiobook, read/listened in 2017 on 5/20 to page 238, and on 6/9 to the end. I loved it (4½ of 5) ?? and recommend it.
In addition to being a standard lawyer suspense novel, the type that first caught my attention when I binged on John Grisham's 1991 -
The Firm, 1992 -
The Pelican Brief, 1993 -
The Client, it is also a mystery with more twists than a pretzel.
I'm certain the genre was around before
John Grisham but, for me, he turned the genre from Graham Crackers into Hershey's Chocolate.
In March 2017
William L. Myers Jr.'s
A Criminal Defense looked more appealing to me than the
other Kindle First offerings that month. I'm glad I bumped this one to the top of a very long list of "to read" books.

Our author, Mr. Myers, gets us into the story quick enough. His protagonist, Mick McFarland is standing outside the home of a convicted murderer's mother who has begged him to appeal her only son's hopeless murder case. Mick took the case pro bono
a and has lost two costly appeals already but his Hail Mary
b legal maneuver was caught in the end zone, so now Justin Bauer will be getting a new trial. The mother has been so distraught she no longer answers the phone. So Mick is at her door to try to give her the good news. Great that Justin will get a new trial, nightmare that Mick's firm will be likely go broke from the trial.