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The Last Verdict
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Dieser Artikel gilt, aufgrund seiner Grösse, beim Versand als 2 Artikel!
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| A judge. A buried file. A verdict twenty years overdue.
When Nadia Karim takes the bench in Cairo's most high-profile murder trial of the year, she believes she is in control. She has presided over four hundred trials. She has never flinched.
Then the defendant looks at her - and smiles.
Youssef Mansour is a cardiothoracic surgeon accused of poisoning his wife. He is calm, composed, and entirely unconcerned with his own acquittal. Because Youssef has not come to court to be judged.
He has come to judge her.
Twenty years ago, Nadia buried a piece of evidence that sent an innocent man to prison. That man was Youssef's brother. He served every day of his sentence, lost everything, and died on a Cairo pavement at forty-nine - of a heart that had been asked too much.
Youssef spent fourteen years building his case. Now he has everything. And he is offering Nadia a choice: tell the truth on the record, or watch him do it for her - in front of the cameras, from the witness stand, with no ground left for her to stand on.
The Last Verdict is a taut, morally devastating novella set in the courts and apartments and river-lit streets of Cairo. It is a story about the lies we build from pieces of truth, the distance between justice and the law, and what it costs - and what it means - to finally tell the complete truth when it is late, but not too late.
For readers of John Grisham, Khaled Hosseini, and Ahdaf Soueif. |
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