I have about 12 more chapters to go on The Litigators. The Great Jerry Alisandros has ditched them. We are reaching the part of the story where everything is sliding downhill and the bad guys are closing in. The bad news just keeps coming for Finley and Figg one after another.
I'm reflecting on what is the main theme of this book so far. Is the writer trying to tell us something about greed in the law profession? The big firms are rich and work like slaves. Meanwhile the smaller law firms can only dream of having big cases one day to earn from that one big case that will make them rich and achieve recognition. Is the writer trying to say we should never give up on our dreams? Some lawyers like Wally try too hard and regret later for not being ethical? So far David has been the sensible one compared to Oscar and Wally. I wonder how the small firm is going to get out of their troubles. To be continued.