Sunday, 15 June 2025

Degree of Guilt - Dan Cogan

 


Oh! Don’t you just love it when you are sent a book that you know nothing about, by an author you’ve never heard of, have zero expectations and you remember from past experiences in this situation that you can sometimes end up with four hundred pages of self-published tedium  - yet it turns out to be a real page turner? That is exactly what happened with Degree of Guilt and, joy of joys, it’s just the first in a series – Baby of the Bailey. And I can’t wait for the next book(s) in the series!

 

It's a mufti faceted plot that involves murder, a court case, family dynamics, mysterious pasts and a complex investigation and that’s for starters! The plot is convoluted and twisty. The court room sequences are intense, there is a lot of quite detailed and specific points of law which I did find a bit hard going, I would imagine the author has some kind of background in the legal world. But there is a good balance with the other aspects of the story. I found it to be a well-constructed story 

 

Emily du Lac is our ‘Baby of the Bailey’, an energetic law student, impetuous, enthusiastic, a tad juvenile at times, but with those instincts that send her sniffing out solutions like a dog trained to find truffles. Her exuberance is infectious and exasperating in equal measure! But I do think that some of her ‘activities’ would not necessarily ensure her a long, legal career! She is the standout character closely followed by her mentor and tutor Nigel. 

 

If the author does not have a legal background, then his research is impeccable. But there is also a lot of technical computer know how and medical knowledge too. 

 

There are plenty of red herrings but there were several aspects that I did figure out. However, the epilogue was a genius master stroke that I didn’t see coming and had me chuckling long after I put the book down. 

 

It’s one of those stories that if you were to sit back and consider it objectively and realistically you might conclude it was far fetched but Mr. Cogan is such a good storyteller that the reader is enveloped and invested totally in the story.

 

My thanks to Librarything and the author for a copy of this book – signed – oh yes! I thoroughly enjoyed it and I am looking forwards to more in the series.  

 

 

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