cover image FOUR TRIALS

FOUR TRIALS

John Edwards, with John Auchard and Robert Draper. . Simon & Schuster, $25 (237pp) ISBN 978-0-7432-4497-8

PW reviews books by four of the 10 Democratic presidential hopefuls.

FOUR TRIALS John Edwards with John Auchard and Robert Draper. Simon & Schuster , $25 (TKp) ISBN 0-7432-4497-4

In his campaigns for the U.S. Senate (successful) and the Democratic presidential nomination (struggling), Edwards has defiantly celebrated his earlier career as a trial lawyer. Following that instinct, Edwards has chosen to cast his campaign memoir as an account of four of his courtroom experiences. Four Trials is brimming with Clintonian empathy for regular folks, and Edwards is at his best in his endearing portraits of the victims he represented in medical malpractice and personal injury lawsuits. He also displays a keen understanding of the psychology of a jury, which he calls "a microcosm of democracy." Edwards weaves in recollections of his youth as the son of a mill worker, his rise to prominence as a lawyer, his dedicated family life and the death of his son in a car accident. But he mostly sticks to the details of the cases; he omits almost entirely his years in the Senate and his plans for the presidency. Edwards can tell a good yarn, and at times this book works as a courtroom drama. But it suffers from shoddy, platitudinous prose. The book is chiefly of interest for the way it manifests Edwards's strategy to present himself as an advocate for the downtrodden to his new jury, the American electorate. Agents, Mel Berger and Norman Brokaw. (Dec. 1)