While Justice Sleeps is an intricately plotted
thriller. Sharp and fast paced, it covers a lot of ground. The author clearly knows
her way around DC, the federal government, and the Supreme Court. Main
character Avery Keene is biracial and has a drug addict mother, allowing Abrams
to touch on issues of race and family, addiction and loss. Avery is smart and
capable, and she is surrounded by a small cast of interesting side characters.
I did not feel character development was a great strength of
this novel. The bad guys especially, while diverse, are pretty standard in
their bad guyness. The plot was a little too convoluted for my liking, but that
may be partly because I’m just not in the mood to figure things out after a
year of Covid-19 pandemic. I can imagine some readers will love all the twists,
turns, and puzzles. (I also don’t play chess, and the author leans pretty hard
on chess analogies.)
There’s a lot to like here for thriller fans. Recommended
for readers of the Da Vinci Code and similar novels, and also for
watchers of TV shows like Law & Order. While Justice Sleeps has “movie
script” written all over it.
I read an advance reader copy of While Justice Sleeps
from Netgalley. The book is scheduled to be released in May 2021, and the
Galesburg Public Library will own it in print and as an ebook.