So many illnesses these days target the young. Many live a life that has no resemblance to that of most children, while hospitals are their playgrounds and doctors and nurses their friends. But what happens when something goes wrong in these playgrounds? the results are generally more catastrophic.
In Suzy’s Case by Andy Siegel, you are taken into the life of a child who has suffered the worst and yet maintains a carefree and happy attitude. Suzy is an amazing and wondrous child, a joy to be around.
We follow Tug Wyler, a personal injury and malpractice attorney, as he finds himself in a case that is six years old, with an expert who is not convinced of any wrongdoing. Thinking he will easily be able to be recused from this case, he does not factor in the resilience of a strong and protective mother. Where she believes, he can only follow. Soon he is caught up in a case that is way beyond his understanding, and as he moves forward his own life is in jeopardy.
On the surface, everything is what it appears to be, but a bubbling cauldron of trouble is heating up. What really happened in that hospital six years before? Was Suzy--as her mom believes--really just another unfortunate statistic? There is certainly something foul that is beginning to surface, but can Tug grab and hold before it slips away?
It's always a difficult feeling when dealing with children and stories that involve them to this extent, yet Siegel has handled it with great care and sensitivity. You grow to love Suzy in a way that is beyond the imagination. She becomes so real, and a pulse glows though the pages of the book. Her mother is a woman on a mission and will not allow even the smallest of stumbles. Sharp with a few unsavory connections, she is the catalyst that continues to guide the case forward. With so little proof of her claims, she nonetheless holds the cards to make this lawsuit break apart. Her love and fierceness remind you a jungle cat, and she will not stop.







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