As the Torkelson case unfolds, a second narrator chimes in to tell us the story behind the story: the tale of Lee's life. What, after all, was Norman's motive? Why not do what he had done for the last twenty years: run, and leave behind a broke and brokenhearted victim? Lee starts to wonder if her client is not merely not guilty but covering for the real killer and, in doing so, performing the first selfless act of his life. But just as Lee is resigning herself to the inevitable "Guilty!" verdict, she begins to have doubts. Clearly, he murdered Bobette Frisch, the dumpy, sour fiftysomething bar owner who had fallen madly in love with him. Norman - manly, magnetic, and morally reprehensible - is a man who crisscrosses America looking for patsies for his cruel marriage scam: Love 'em, liquidate their assets, leave 'em. At first, as Lee explains to us, the case seems routine, the evidence overwhelming. Into her life drifts Norman Torkelson, a career con man charged with strangling to death his latest mark. In Susan Isaac's most ambitious and dazzling novel to date, we are introduced to Lee White, a criminal defense lawyer practicing on Long Island.
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