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"It's deja vu, with a big twist. Three summers after the biggest man-made environmental disaster in history, millions of gallons of oil are again spewing from a hole in the ocean floor. But this rig explosion was in Cuban waters, just 50 miles away from Florida, and the situation is complex. The consortium doing the work is state-owned Venezuelan, Chinese and Russian, controlled by a mineral lease from the Cuban government. And the Cubans not only refuse assistance from the U.S., they also vow to fire on "hostile" American vessels that enter Cuban waters. Enter Jack Swyteck, who's honeymooning with his new wife Andie in the lower Keys. As an ominous black slick appears in the water, CIA agent Andie is called back to an undercover assignment. So Jack heads to Key West to see his buddy Theo Knight. There Jack is transformed from bystander to player in the unfolding oil catastrophe when he takes on a client whose husband was on the rig that blew up. She wants Jack to file a wrongful death in U.S. court. Taking on this unimaginably complicated case pitches Jack into a dangerous world, only to find that his case and Andie's assignment may be lethally connected"--… (more)
User reviews
Jack is an attorney and he's hired by a woman of Cuban descent to represent her. He wants to sue for wrongful death but isn't sure who to sue since the
Jack works on the case with his sidekick, Theo. The banter between these two characters makes up much of the story.
Jack, Theo and Jack's wife Andie go about their business. Andie is an undercover agent for the FBI. As Jack and Theo progress, I didn't feel any urgency to know what they were going to do.
Theo is constantly complaining and demanding Jack's time, like a spoiled child. Andie's undercover work was interesting but the novel, as a whole, fell below the past work of James Grippando.
At first, I thought this book would be a fictional illustration of the theme of Justice Stephen Breyer’s recent book The Court and the World. In that book, Justice Breyer argues that globalization has made a familiarity with foreign law and international affairs not only unavoidable but essential. As parties harmed by the oil spill (such as businesses adversely affected along the Florida coast and spouses of those who died in the explosion) line up to sue for damages, the legal complications seem insurmountable. The rig was built at a shipyard in China and leased from the Chinese. The owner of the rig is a Russian company. The oil company in charge of drilling is owned by Venezuelan government. The drilling is being done in Cuban waters and is controlled by a mineral lease from the Cuban government. The multinational crew of 167 working for this international consortium hailed from seventeen different countries. And to add to the complications, the technology on the rig was manufactured by a foreign subsidiary of an American defense contractor. Regulating all of this is an alphabet soup of laws and agencies of each country that have possible applications to the incident.
The legal aspects of the central event in this book might have made for an absorbing story. How should each country’s laws be applied? How might the U.S. courts determine an equitable resolution to the plethora of intersecting claims, conflicts of laws, and even the problem of treaties and embargoes, when cooperation from some of the countries was not likely? There was some flirtation with the question of which governments might have benefitted from the explosion, but that plot thread wasn’t taken very far.
Rather, the story focused on “thriller” aspects, with kidnappings, murders, shady characters following both Jack and Andie, and threats made to Jack from all sides to drop his case for compensation on behalf of one of the widows.
Jack’s BFF, Theo Knight, is apparently included in all Jack’s adventures to provide comic relief, only he was more annoying than funny, in my opinion.
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DDC/MDS
813.54 |