There is often comfort to be had in the familiar.
You can wear that old sweater. Grab a stool at your cozy corner tavern. Order the "usual" at your favorite restaurant. Or you can pick up a book with the name Scott Turow on the cover.
In his newest, "Suspect," you will find Turow in fine form. Comforting, yes, but also satisfyingly fresh and creative.
He has never been a flashy writer. But he will make you turn a book's pages, so forceful is his plotting, so eye-popping its twists and surprises, and so colorful his characters. The star of this new novel is one we have met before.
Clarice "Pinky" Granum was in Turow's previous novel, the terrific "The Last Trial" in 2020. She was the granddaughter of one of Turow's great characters, lawyer Alejandro "Sandy" Stern, who has been there since that initial blockbuster, 1990's "Presumed Innocent."
Turow's books have arrived in a steady stream ever since, with Stern in roles large and small. Turow's 11 bestsellers together have sold more than 30 million copies and there are movie versions of "The Burden of Proof," "Innocent," "Presumed Innocent" and "Reversible Errors."
Turow has also found time and energy — don't ask me how — to have a successful career as a lawyer who not only, as an assistant U.S. attorney, was lead counsel in the Operation Greylord trial but later, in private practice, helped free an innocent man from death row and worked pro bono for years on wrongful convictions and capital punishment reform.
He has also written nonfiction books, served as president of the Authors Guild, occasionally plays music for charity with that band of famous novelists known as the Rock Bottom Remainders, and contributes op-ed pieces to a variety of publications.