A Case of Need is the story
of Dr. John Berry’s efforts to clear his fellow doctor and friend, Dr. Arthur
Lee, after a teenager in his care dies from an illegal abortion. My first thought for a title for this review
was, ‘You’ll need a scorecard to follow all the characters in this somewhat
preachy, meandering plot involving an obstinate doctor who wants to play
detective but has no idea how the criminal justice system works.’ But that seemed a bit long.
As mentioned above, the story deals with abortion and the need to
broaden/relax the laws. So, depending on
your political and religious leanings, you may find the story anywhere between
contemporary and thought-provoking to depraved and immoral. Be advised.
Beyond the ethical position it takes, there is a story here with some
suspense and good pacing. The suspense
is provided by assembling a myriad of suspects and digging into the background
of several witnesses, many of whom have their own secrets – drug use,
infidelity, self-destructive behavior, deceitfulness. And surprisingly, Berry, with no
authority and only some vague background in the Military Police, unearths all
of this information singlehandedly. But
after doing so, he doesn’t understand he has more than enough to raise
reasonable doubt; then he doesn’t want to use this information because it’s too
“dirty;” finally, he complains that the lawyer didn’t use it aggressively
enough. The only consistency I could
find in Berry was that he always wanted to play it alone and as a result, the
circumstances that pitted him against the world were of his own making. That behavior doesn’t gain my empathy and
tends to make my mind wander to other books I could be reading.
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