
Hailed as the most suspenseful and compelling novel in decades, Presumed Innocent brings to life our worst nightmare: that of an ordinary citizen facing conviction for the most terrible of all crimes. It's the stunning portrayal of one man's all-too...
Sandy Stern, brilliant defense attorney, is facing an event so emotionally shattering that no part of his life is left untouched. It reveals a family caught in a maelstrom of hidden crimes, shocking secrets, and warring passions. And it will make h...
Returning to the locale of Kindle County, Turow gives us Mack Malloy, ex-cop, not-quite-ex-drunk, and partner-on-the-wane in one of the country's most high-powered law firms. A longtime ally of the wayward, Mack is on the trail of a colleague, his fi...
Robbie Feaver (pronounced "favor") is a successful personal injury lawyer with a burgeoning practice, a way with the ladies, and a beautiful wife (whom he loves) dying of an irreversible illness. He also has a secret bank account where he occasionall...
Death Row inmate Rommy Gandolph insists he's innocent-and new evidence has convinced his court-appointed attorney. Once a skeptic, Kindle County corporate lawyer Arthur Raven is now a fervent crusader. But in the world of criminal law he's a rookie s...
From the #1 New York Times bestselling author of Presumed Innocent comes a compelling new legal mystery featuring George Mason from Personal Injuries. Originally commissioned and published in the New York Times Magazine, this edition contains additio...
The series centers on Rusty Sabich, a highly intelligent, principled, and ambitious prosecutor in Kindle County (a fictional stand-in for Cook County/Chicago). In Presumed Innocent, Rusty is accused of murdering his mistress, Carolyn Polhemus, a fellow prosecutor with whom he had a passionate affair. The novel follows his trial, his crumbling marriage, his internal struggle, and the unraveling of his carefully constructed life as he fights to prove his innocence while grappling with guilt, rage, and self-loathing.
Innocent (23 years later) picks up with Rusty now a judge, accused once again—this time of murdering his wife, Barbara. The story revisits Rusty’s psyche, his marriage, his son Nat, and the lingering shadow of the first case, exploring how past sins and secrets continue to poison the present.
The other books in the Kindle County universe (The Burden of Proof, Pleading Guilty, Personal Injuries, Reversible Errors, Limitations, Testimony) feature Rusty in supporting roles or cameos, usually as a colleague, mentor, or figure of authority. They expand the world of Kindle County’s legal system—prosecutors, defense attorneys, judges, and the moral compromises they all make—while maintaining Rusty as a recurring touchstone.
- Rosalind "Rusty" Sabich — Central protagonist. Brilliant, driven prosecutor (later judge). Handsome, articulate, deeply moral on the surface but capable of profound moral compromise. Haunted by his past, his marriage, and his own capacity for darkness. One of the most complex and compelling protagonists in legal thriller fiction.
- Barbara Sabich — Rusty’s wife. Beautiful, brilliant, troubled, and volatile. A mathematician and academic. Her marriage to Rusty is passionate but deeply strained.
- Nat Sabich — Rusty and Barbara’s son. Intelligent, troubled, and caught in the middle of his parents’ dysfunction.
- Carolyn Polhemus — Ambitious, seductive prosecutor; Rusty’s mistress in *Presumed Innocent*. Her murder drives the first book.
- Tommy Molto — Ambitious prosecutor and Rusty’s rival. Becomes a recurring figure; complex, flawed, and ultimately human.
- Sandy Stern — Rusty’s brilliant defense attorney in *Presumed Innocent*. Wise, elegant, and deeply ethical.
The series is set in Kindle County, a fictional metropolitan area modeled closely on Cook County / Chicago, Illinois. The primary locations are:
- Downtown Chicago — courthouses, law offices, high-rise apartments, the criminal justice system
- Suburban and affluent areas — where Rusty and his family live (elegant homes, private schools, country clubs)
- Working-class neighborhoods — where many victims and suspects come from
- Courtrooms, jails, police stations, and law offices — vividly rendered with authentic detail
The time period spans the late 1980s (Presumed Innocent) to the early 2010s (Innocent), capturing the evolution of legal practice, technology, and social attitudes over two decades. The atmosphere is urban and sophisticated, with the weight of the legal system, political ambition, class divides, and the constant tension between public justice and private truth.
Serious, introspective, morally complex, and psychologically rich—literary legal thriller with a dark, adult edge. Turow’s tone is measured, elegant, and unflinchingly honest: crimes and trials are described with realistic detail and emotional weight, investigations are methodical and cerebral, and the narrative voice is reflective and often melancholy. There is little humor—dry irony or grim observations instead—while emotional depth comes from Rusty’s self-examination, guilt, shame, and the quiet tragedy of flawed human lives. The series is not fast-paced pulp; it is deliberate and thoughtful, exploring the gray areas of justice, truth, marriage, ambition, and redemption. Romance is passionate but often painful or doomed. The tone is ultimately compassionate yet unsentimental—evil is real, justice is imperfect, and even the innocent rarely emerge unscathed. It is mature, intelligent crime fiction—perfect for readers who want legal thrillers with depth, character, and moral ambiguity.
The Kindle County / Rusty Sabich series is a towering achievement in legal thriller fiction—profound, morally complex, and beautifully written stories that explore the dark heart of justice, marriage, and human nature. Through Rusty Sabich’s tormented journey from prosecutor to defendant to judge, Scott Turow crafts gripping, psychologically rich mysteries that transcend genre conventions. Set against the vivid backdrop of Chicago’s legal world, the books offer intelligent plotting, unforgettable characters, and unflinching honesty about ambition, guilt, and the limits of truth. For readers who want legal thrillers with depth, emotional power, and literary quality, Rusty Sabich is essential reading—a modern classic that stands among the finest works in crime fiction. A profound, re-readable saga that lingers long after the final verdict.
Genres
People / Creatures
Top Series in Legal Thriller