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“THE BARD OF OUR LITIGIOUS AGE”

Scott Turow

7:30 p.m. Monday, October 20, 2025

Conversation with WAMC’s Joe Donahue
Page Hall - University at Albany Downtown Campus

135 Western Avenue, Albany NY 12203 See map.

Scott Turow is one of America’s preeminent authors of legal and crime fiction. In 1990, he appeared on the cover of TIME magazine, which proclaimed him “The Bard of Our Litigious Age.”

 

A former practicing attorney, Turow is the author of fourteen bestselling works of fiction, beginning with Presumed Innocent (1987), which became the basis of Apple TV’s most-watched drama series in 2024, as well as an acclaimed 1990 film starring Harrison Ford.

 

Turow’s books have been translated into more than 40 languages, and have sold more than 30 million copies worldwide. His newest book is Presumed Guilty (2025), the long-anticipated third installment in the “Rusty” Sabich trilogy. Novelist Kristin Hannah called it, “A compelling, unputdownable legal thriller that explores the dark side of justice in a small town and on a fractured family.”

 

 

Cosponsored by Albany Law School, the New York State Bar Association, and the Historical Society of the New York Courts.

from the publisher

Rusty is a retired judge attempting a third act in life with a loving soon-to-be wife, Bea, with whom he shares both a restful home on an idyllic lake in the rural Midwest and a plaintive hope that this marriage will be his best, and his last. But the peace that’s taken Rusty so long to find evaporates when Bea’s young adult son, Aaron, living under their supervision while on probation for drug possession, disappears. If Aaron doesn’t return soon, he will be sent back to jail.
 
Aaron eventually turns up with a vague story about a camping trip with his troubled girlfriend, Mae, that ended in a fight and a long hitchhike home. Days later, when she still hasn’t returned, suspicion falls on Aaron, and when Mae is subsequently discovered dead, Aaron is arrested and set for trial on charges of first-degree murder.
 
Faced with few choices and even fewer hopes, Bea begs Rusty to return to court one last time, to defend her son and to save their last best hope for happiness. For Rusty, the question is not whether to defend Aaron, or whether the boy is in fact innocent—it’s whether the system to which he has devoted his life can ever provide true justice for those who are presumed guilty.

Scott Turow books
Scott Turow. Photo credit Audrey Snow Owen

(Photo credit: Audrey Snow Owen)

Scott Turow's Presumed Guilty
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