ŷ

Jump to ratings and reviews

Win a free print copy of this book!

11 days and 07:14:18

100 copies available
U.S. only
Rate this book

Eddie Flynn #6

The Devil's Advocate

Win a free print copy of this book!

11 days and 07:14:18

100 copies available
U.S. only
Rate this book
A deadly prosecutor

They call him the King of Death Row. Randal Korn has sent more men to their deaths than any district attorney in the history of the United States.

A twisted ritualistic killing

When a young woman, Skylar Edwards, is found murdered in Buckstown, Alabama, a corrupt sheriff arrests the last person to see her alive, Andy Dubois. It doesn't seem to matter to anyone that Andy is innocent.

A small town boiling with rage


Everyone in Buckstown believes Andy is guilty. He has no hope of a fair trial. And the local defense attorney assigned to represent him has disappeared.

A former con-artist


Hot shot New York lawyer Eddie Flynn travels south to fight fire with fire. He plans to destroy the prosecutors case, find the real killer and save Andy from the electric chair.

But the murders are just beginning.

Is Eddie Flynn next?

403 pages, ebook

First published November 9, 2021

732 people are currently reading
23.2k people want to read

About the author

Steve Cavanagh

29books8,623followers
Steve Cavanagh is a critically acclaimed, Sunday Times best-selling author of the Eddie Flynn series which has sold a million copies in the UK. His third novel, The Liar, won the CWA Gold Dagger for Crime Novel of the year 2018. Thirteen won the Theakstons Old Peculier Crime novel of the year 2019. FIFTY FIFTY was a Richard and Judy Book club choice, and the BBC Between The Covers book club choice. All of his novels have been nominated for major awards. He is a consistent International bestseller.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
7,190 (51%)
4 stars
5,265 (37%)
3 stars
1,295 (9%)
2 stars
222 (1%)
1 star
59 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,496 reviews
Profile Image for jessica.
2,626 reviews46.5k followers
December 1, 2021
this book got my blood boiling.

ive never been so furious with a story before. and i understand that thats the point - books should make you feel something, especially when racism, white supremacy, and police corruption are still such on-going problems to this day. but when a story puts me in an incurable bad mood for hours after finishing the book, is that really a good reading experience?

the only solace offered is experiencing eddie flynn & team masterfully dominate the courtroom. all of the little traps they laid along the way for the prosecution, the key evidence so expertly gathered and presented, and just knowing they are most likely two steps ahead is so satisfying. getting to see real justice served is such a much needed relief - i just wish it had happened sooner than the 70% mark.

one thing is for sure - this book is compelling. i didnt find it as entertaining as some of the previous books in the series (this one is much more of a downer, imo), but it sure is eye opening.

3.5 stars
September 25, 2023
As a strong advocate of Steve Cavanagh’s novels, this one certainly did not disappoint. With the intelligent plots, the nerve wrecking suspense and the intense courtroom drama, my favourite gritty detective, Eddie Flynn, delivers another stunning performance with the requisite sharp and witty banter that I just love.

Who is Guilty? The Devils apprentice or in this case advocate!!! The Pastor?, the District Attorney?, the county sheriff?, the small town of Buckstown?, or the white supremacists? The boyfriend? Or all of them for something?

It is this endless list of suspects that makes this story so riveting and one I was immersed in from the opening pages. An absolutely cracking crime thriller.

A brief summary of the plot

Andy Dubois stands accused of the brutal murder of Skylar Edwards and with the compelling evidence stacked against the defendant � the signed confession and the confirmed sighting of Andy Dubois seen arguing with the victim, this is a slam dunk case. And one sure to see Dubois convicted with minimal effort.

Yet the unflinching and unorthodox Eddie Flynn doesn’t just take on a seemingly unwinnable case but also chooses to take on the omnipotent power of the DA, the King of Death Row, who has sent more people to the chair than any other DA in America. Because he can. Yes, the devil enjoys it but is he the killer?

Review and Comments

What made this an even better crime thriller, in this fascinating series, are the heavy themes of capital punishment and racism that takes place in the setting of the small town that often feels impenetrable.

After reading Cavanagh’s additional footnotes and revealing that four judges are currently responsible for 15% of the total number of death sentences in the US. I was intrigued to learn more.

It was on this basis that I researched the real extent of capital punishment, the profile of the killers and their victims, and the states most likely to pass a death sentence. Blimey I was enlightened.

Some facts� More white people are on death row than any other race or ethnic profile, more white people kill white people than any other race. A few states account for over 50% of the total number of people on death row.

Although this is not the only picture over the last four decades. The statistics do not account for the lynchings and unpunishable deaths of black people that never see the inside of the court room. Nor does it show the emerging trend. All so thought provoking and enlightening to a non-American who does not live this justice every day. Then again I did research countries like China and Middle Eastern countries like Saudis Arabia whose numbers far exceed the US.

As for the book this was every bit as exhilarating as I’ve come to expect from Steve Cavanagh. A commanding performance from Flynn who I adore as a book character. As for the plots and storytelling it was weighty, impressive, and corrupt but fantastic.
Profile Image for Paromjit.
3,080 reviews25.9k followers
July 12, 2021
The latest in Steve Cavanagh's legal thriller series featuring ex-con man, New York lawyer, Eddie Flynn, draws parallels between contemporary American realities with its echoes of the 1930s Alabama depicted in To Kill a Mockingbird with the entrenched racism of Maycomb, and the iconic lawyer, Atticus Finch, defending a black man falsely accused of rape. Eddie, and his team of Harry Ford, his law firm partner, Kate Brooks, and the tough Melissa Bloch leave the security of their New York office to travel to Buckstown, Alabama, to defend an innocent young black man, Andy Dubois, from being put on death row for the brutally vicious and ritualistic murder of student Skylar Edwards. The odds are against them, the evidence against Andy seems insurmountable, including 2 confessions and if that was not enough, there are well organised white supremacists led by The Pastor with deadly plans.

In what is Eddie's toughest case, he faces a formidable foe in the shape of the powerful District Attorney Randal Korn, a man who goes for the death penalty in all his cases, and his success rate is unsurpassed in the country, he has never lost. The sinister Korn, reeking of death and decay, doesn't care how he wins his cases, by fair means or foul, nor whether the defendant is innocent and he is aided and abetted by the corrupt local law enforcement department, run by Sheriff Colt Lomax. Eddie doesn't go in blind to the dangers he is walking into, Andy's previous lawyer, Cody Warren has gone missing, along with critical evidence that would have proved his client's innocence. Eddie and his team face hostility from locals convinced of Andy's guilt, but there are greater threats, a greater evil and malevolence at play that lies at the heart of why Skylar was murdered.

Cavanagh's fast paced and twisty storytelling is full of thrills and spills galore, packed with sky high levels of suspense and tension, so much so that I was turning the pages as fast as I could until I reached the end. The majority of the book has Eddie uncertain as to whether justice will prevail, but his principles will not allow him to give up, despite knowing his life and those of his team are at stake. This is a wonderfully dark and intense legal thriller, where once again Eddie falls back on a skill set acquired from his past as a con man. Flynn is one of my favourite fictional lawyers, and I am hugely anticipating his next outing. Highly recommended to all crime and thriller fans. Many thanks to the publisher for an ARC.
Profile Image for Sujoya - theoverbookedbibliophile.
788 reviews3,171 followers
February 3, 2023
3.5�

The sixth book in Steve Cavanagh’s Eddie Flynn Series has our conman-turned-lawyer traveling out of state to represent a young black man Andy Dubois, accused of brutally murdering a young woman Skylar Edwards in Buckstown, Alabama, where corruption runs deep in the small town as does racism. Pitted against Randal Korn the sadistic prosecutor of Sunville County, Alabama whose idea of justice equals capital punishment and with the real killer whose agenda includes much more than simply murder, on the loose, Eddie and his team (who subsequently joins him) have their work cut out for them. From the moment they step foot in Buckstown, Eddie and Harry realize that the whole town is against Andy and by default, resent the out-of-town lawyer and his team defending the young man they believe is guilty of murder.

Steve Cavanagh’s The Devil’s Advocate is an intricately plotted, action-packed thriller that kept me guessing till the very last page. While I did enjoy following Eddie Flynn and his team (I love that Eddie is now working with Kate and Bloch and retired Judge Harry Ford), I did feel that the investigative element and the build-up took precedence over the signature courtroom drama (which features much later in the narrative) that we expect from the Eddie Flynn series. I like that each member of the team significantly contributes to the team’s efforts to save Andy from being wrongfully convicted. Presented through multiple PoVs over seven days, the narrative has strong socio-political overtones and touches upon issues such as capital punishment, corruption in law enforcement, prosecutorial misconduct, conspiracy, white supremacy groups and domestic terrorism and racism. I know that these issues are of critical importance, timely, and relevant, but the narrative gets a tad convoluted in the process of incorporating all these elements into the plotline. The Author’s Note at the end of the book is informative and provides context on some of the issues mentioned in the plot.

Overall I did enjoy this novel � it is fast-paced, thrilling and suspenseful- but not as much as the previous installments. I am a fan of this series and do look forward to reading more from Steve Cavanagh in the future.
Profile Image for Jayme.
1,428 reviews3,875 followers
June 19, 2022
White Supremacy is alive and well in Sunville County, Alabama.

What isn’t alive and well are the many men convicted of crimes, here, by its prosecutor, Randal Korn.

In fact, one out of every twenty of the death row occupants, in the U.S. was put there by Korn-as he has NEVER prosecuted a murder without calling for the death penalty, he has never been successfully appealed and he’s never lost a case.

YET

You see, the overly zealous D.A. enjoys watching executions and never misses an opportunity to witness the gruesome act in person, even if the men weren’t guilty.

Eddie Flynn has been recruited to save the latest innocent man-Andy Dubois, from that fate.

He arrived in town along with his consultant, retired judge, Harry Ford, his new partner, Kate Brooks, and their investigator, Bloch.

The evidence has been rigged, witnesses have been silenced and Eddie and his team only have SEVEN days to find an angle that will save his client’s life and maybe take down the crooked D.A. in the process.

As always, the pace is fast, but this time the book reads more like an ACTION-THRILLER than it does a courtroom drama. We don’t even enter the courtroom till almost the 3/4 mark in the book-and even then, we don’t remain in it for the duration.

Though, this is still a 4⭐️ read, I didn’t enjoy it as much as past work-as Eddie Flynn and his clever cross examinations are what make the series so entertaining! We weren’t in the courtroom nearly long enough for my preferences!

I hope that the focus returns to the courtroom in “The Accomplice� (Eddie Flynn #7) publishing soon!

Although this can be read as a stand-alone, it is beneficial to read the series in order so that you have the full background on all of the recurring characters.

Also, the PROLOGUE can be skipped if you want to avoid reading the graphic description of the NINE excruciating minutes it took for one of Korn’s Victims to die by electric chair.

DO READ the author’s note at the end of the book which talks about “The Fair Punishment Project� and America’s top Five deadliest prosecutors and the personalities that drive the death penalty.

A buddy read with Pat, Ceecee and DeAnn. Check out all of their amazing reviews for additional insight!

Available NOW!
Profile Image for Bibi.
1,287 reviews106 followers
August 24, 2021
*5++++ stars*

is the kind of book you finish then wonder
“now what could I read that would top that?�
Profile Image for Warda.
1,281 reviews22.7k followers
November 1, 2024
Just poetic from beginning to end. Absolutely loved rereading this.

—ĔĔĔĔĔĔĔĔĔĔ�

So, everything that I wanted to say has left me. My head is empty. Maybe because it’s close to midnight and my old self is tired. Or maybe it’s because my mind feels overwhelmed by this story and everything that occurred.

Reading about racism and white supremacy and their psyche hurts my brain. They are filth like no other and this story did an incredible job at highlighting the danger that is racism when its supported by media, law enforcement and your ordinary folk. It becomes a plague.
On the flip side, it emphasised their stupidity, their pathetic and weak mindset. They’re fuelled by hate, never by intelligence or facts. The whole thing is manipulative.

Steve Cavanagh knows how to write a compelling story and I enjoyed every moment of it. It started off with Eddie Flynn only. The team has now grown into a found family and each of them standout.

Highly recommend the audiobooks. They became a part of my morning routine, this series, and I don’t know what I’m supposed to do now.
Profile Image for Carolyn Walsh .
1,796 reviews570 followers
February 2, 2023
Wow! Author Steve Cavanagh writes excellent legal/crime thrillers and has surpassed himself with this terrific, edge-of-your-seat, powerful, pulse-pounding novel. The fast-paced plot kept me riveted, but it was necessary to take short breaks to catch my breath and find that my heart was pounding. The suspense and tension kept rising at a rapid pace within a malevolent setting.

Former conman Eddie Flynn, now a successful New York lawyer, accepts a request by a man with a mysterious job and powerful government connections. He is to go to Buckston, Alabama, to defend a young, innocent black man, Andy Dubois. His local defence attorney has vanished, and the trial is quickly approaching. Andy is charged with the murder of his friend and workmate, Skylar. The killing was brutal, and her body was displayed in a ritualistic manner. Flynn travels south with his team, Harry Ford, Kate Brooks, and Melissa Block.

Flynn learns he will be arguing the case against a deadly prosecutor, District Attorney Korn. He always seeks the death penalty and is proud that his county has a record of the greatest proportion of executions in the USA. This malicious, evil man is not guided by morals or justice. The perverse Korn admits to the thrill of watching those he convicted die in the electric chair or by lethal injection. The more painful the death, the greater his satisfaction. He admits that watching gives him a surge of life and power in his body. He has never lost a case presented before a jury.



It matters not at all if the person receiving the death penalty is innocent. He wins his cases by having bribed, threatened, and corrupted the local sheriff, jury, and others who fear him. Any evidence that the person charged might be innocent disappears, along with anybody who may oppose Korn's demands. He has ordered the murder of those who might interfere with his verdicts. People remark that an odour of death and decay surrounds him.

As soon as Flynn and his team arrive in Buckston, they realize they are in hostile territory. Flynn feels that defending Andy in trial may be almost impossible to win. There have been two confessions and a DNA test against his client. In fact, they might not only lose the case but may lose their lives before the trial concludes. The townspeople are certain Andy is guilty. A White Supremacist calling himself the Pastor is stirring up racist feelings and has a secret terrorist agenda.

Flynn feels that with the corrupt, malignant atmosphere surrounding the trial, his onerous duty is to win the case, free Andy, and find the real killer. Now he knows he must also destroy Korn, even if he must resort to skills he learned as a con artist.

This is a propulsive, nerve-wracking story that I highly recommend for its non-stop thrills and chills.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Mª Carmen.
790 reviews
February 8, 2024
"Hacer lo correcto tiene sus consecuencias, de la misma manera que no hacer nada. Y puede ser igual de difícil mirarte en el espejo"

Thriller muy entretenido. Me ha tenido de lo más enganchada.

Dice la sinopsis:

Randal Korn, fiscal del condado en Alabama, tiene el récord de condenas de muerte en EEUU. Tras la muerte de Skylar Edwards en Buckstone, se acusa del crimen a Andy Dubois, un joven negro que trabajaba con ella y el último que la vio viva. Con Korn como acusador sus probabilidades de no ser condenado son escasas. Eso cambia cuando Eddie Flint acepta defenderle. Su equipo dispone solo de siete días para desmontar la acusación y encontrar al auténtico asesino.

Mis impresiones:

Tercer libro que leo de la serie y ahora mismo no sabría decir cuál me ha enganchado más, si este o "13, el asesino está en el jurado". Una lectura adictiva y muy entretenida.

La estructura es la que cabe esperar en un libro de Cavanagh, autor que domina de sobra la técnica del género. Capítulos cortos, ritmo muy vivo, giros bien colocados y mucha acción. No es un libro con el que te pares a pensar, quieres seguir leyendo, saber y ver cómo acaba el lío.

Los capítulos se titulan con los nombres de los personajes. Los que corresponden a Eddie Flint están escritos en primera persona, los que corresponden al resto en tercera. Es una estructura narrativa que nos facilita conocer la globalidad desde más de un punto de vista.

La trama está bien desarrollada. Uno de los quiénes nos lo dan a conocer desde el minuto uno, la identidad el otro, aunque predecible, no se desvela hasta el final. Entremedias, se complica lo indecible. Un acusado inocente al que un loco ha decidido enviar a la silla eléctrica. Un entramado social que le proporciona una red de cooperadores necesarios. Un juez que desconfía de los "elegantes abogados de Nueva York" y muchos ciudadanos atemorizados, que se debaten entre hacer lo correcto y el miedo a alzar la voz. Todo ello con el telón de fondo de un pueblo de la Alabama profunda, una atmósfera asfixiante y no solo por el calor y los insectos.

Toda la parte dedicada al juicio ha sido de lo más adictiva. Inteligente, ágil, nos proporciona alegrías, una salida de ese pozo de injusticia y opresión.

Los personajes correctos. Los hay de todo tipo, en blanco como el acusado, en negro como Korn, que es la maldad personificada, fanáticos como el Pastor y en tonos de gris casi todos los demás. Del equipo de Flint, me han gustado todos. Eddie es una persona imaginativa y fiel a sus principios pese a lo que le han supuesto a nivel personal. Harry es inteligente y entrañable. A mi juicio, Kate y Bloch son los dos personajes más potentes. Las intervenciones de Kate en el juzgado a cuál mejor. La sagacidad de Bloch la convierte en protagonista cada vez que aparece. Me he quedado con ganas de saber algo más de Denise, la nueva administrativa del bufete. Habrá que esperar a las nuevas entregas.
Del resto del elenco, Korn es vomitivo de principio a fin, de los que quieres ver masacrado y con sufrimiento mejor antes que después. Da miedo pensar que haya personas con estas pulsiones formando parte de la judicatura de un país con pena de muerte.
Me ha gustado mucho uno de los jurados y la evolución del juez.

Destaco las reflexiones acerca del coste personal, en ocasiones demoledor, que puede suponer el hacer lo correcto. En esta vida no todo es blanco y negro.

El final expeditivo, pero correcto.

¿Y los peros?

La identidad del Pastor es muy predecible. Llegué a pensar que no podía ser, que era demasiado evidente, pero resultó que sí que era.

Después de ver la manera en que Berlin liquida el asunto no acabo de entender para qué necesitaba a Eddie. Admito que esta objeción es un tanto subjetiva.

En conclusión. Un thriller legal muy entretenido que engancha y no da tregua. Bien desarrollado y en un escenario distinto de los dos anteriores de la serie. Recomendable.
Profile Image for ApoorvaReads.
593 reviews409 followers
August 14, 2021
5+++ stars ⭐️

“When you see something that is not right, not just, not fair, you have a moral obligation to say something.�


This is Steve Cavanagh at his best😌(not me saying this every time he releases a new book BUT ITS TRUE!) I can always trust on Steve to bring something new and unique with his new releases everytime. Steve is one of my favourite all-time authors and probably at the top of my list when it comes to mystery/crime thriller genre. There’s just something about the way he writes, his wit, his delivery which makes me wanna worship the ground he walks on.

Summary-
This book revolves around the murder case of Skylar Edwards (a white girl) and how the town has already set up in their minds that the murder was done by Andy Dubois (a black guy) who worked at a bar with her. To not make it easy there are already 2 confessions, DNA linking Andy to the crime and to top of it all a DA who has a fascination with never prosecuting for a murder without calling for death penalty which is even a more tough job cause a case of death penalty and a normal court is totally different and the pressure is real.

The murder happens in a small town of Buckstown in Alabama where everyone is corrupted and brings whole another meaning to the word � racial discrimination�. Since Andy is black, the whole town has made its mind that he’s a criminal and deserves to be dead.

This case, imo, was the toughest case Eddie has ever had and he has to give his best and put on his favourite suit to prove Andy not guilty.


“The condemned man was offered his final words.
‘I’m innocent and they all know it.�
Korn knew it. And he didn’t care. He didn’t become a prosecutor in a death-penalty state to concern himself with guilt or innocence. It was the system that appealed to him. Justice was simply a cloak he wore to disguise his true nature.�


Randall Korn , also called as � King of Death Row� is Eddie’s biggest challenge till now in his whole career. The guy has a weird fascination with death penalties and the fact that he has never lost a case and has sent more people to death row than any other district attorney in history (115 convictions in 17 years) is really insane and intimidating.

Honestly, I found this guy very interesting. His obsession with death penalties, his aura, the way he didn’t get off by physically killing people but by killing with his legal power really made me wonder and want to know more about him. He has had a tragic past which makes sense but I’m glad what happened to him later cause he had it coming.

“I knew this case would take something from me. Some cases just cost a piece of you, something you won’t ever get back. Sometimes it’s a little piece. Sometimes it’s a big piece. The more I read, the more I was willing to pay the price.�


Eddie Flynn, also called as the loveee of my life, my role model and all time- fav character really outdid himself in this book😭😭 The way he dealt with pressure and how he planned everything out was I N S A N E. I’m in love with his charm, his personality, his way of getting things done, his brain and him🥵🥵

“Korn had an unusual distaste for human life in general. He told himself it didn’t really matter what color his victims were. They all screamed and died the same. Yet, the underlying racism of authority in the South was ever present. He’d seen it his whole career. But this was the first time he’d heard it spoken aloud in a more public conversation. This wasn’t a whispered discussion among two conspirators. It was out in the open now. The silence which followed the statement was not uncomfortable. If anything, it felt natural for it to come out in the open now, in these times.�


This book dealt with heavy topics like Racism, corruption, blackmailing, graphic killing scenes and this made the book even more believable. I was shocked to see that how everyone broke the very principle of justice simply to send a black person to jail and when I read the authors note about there actually being a group of people called The White Camelia, i was outraged. The amount of research Steve did for this book is something I highly appreciate and I loved how he just didn’t show us the good parts but also the bad parts and how people believe anything they hear and judge people based on their skin.

What I also loved about this book was the multiple POVs, I’m really not a fan of multiple POVs but in this book? It was fucking awesome. The use of multiple POVs not only had me guessing till the end but the suspense and the setting it made was brilliant and well-executed. I loved how the author did not only show Eddie’s skills in the case but also Kate’s, Bloch’s and Harry’s. I love this team so much🥺🥺✨✨

This book was highly engrossing and I can’t recommend this book and the series enough. This is gonna go down as my top 1 thriller I’ve read till now and lowkey now looking back at it, Thirteen is nothing in front of this book sksks.
Ngl, there was something which I felt like was missing but overall this book was a fucking masterpiece.

I can’t wait to see what Steve does next and what journey and adventure is on the way for Eddie.

Highly highly recommend this book to all crime and thriller fans!✨�

Ps- this book can be read as a standalone.
Profile Image for Darla.
4,432 reviews1,076 followers
June 24, 2022
This was a huge disappointment and I am a five-star fan of the previous books in this series. Getting so many readers to award this book five stars is truly worthy of Eddie Flynn's skills. Let's name just a few of the messages that Cavanagh attempts to slip by us as readers: 1) All white people who are conservative and believe in the 2nd amendment (some are also NRA members, the horror!) are racist and corrupt justice. 2) The state of Alabama is a racist, white supremacist, death-seeking hellhole. 3) The Camellia flower (Alabama's state flower) is held up as a racist symbol. (Yes, I am aware of the connection to symbolism in "To Kill a Mockingbird.") In truth, the camellia flower is a symbol of love, adoration, and longing. 4) The only way to save a black man's life in Alabama (in a backwards, small town -- aren't they all? No!) is to use the deep state to intervene and bring in a white man from NYC to save the day. Sorry, I am not buying it. I'm done with the Eddie Flynn series.
Profile Image for Chantal.
865 reviews881 followers
June 6, 2022
Our favorite con-lawyer is back defending a young man in a small town who is wrongly accused of murder. The whole town throws major curveballs in our favorite defense team's way to ensure Andy gets a guilty charge. Our team do what they do best, with horrific consequences!

Cant wait for The Accomplice #7 to come out later this year. I love this series and they are so easy to understand and read.
Profile Image for Rainz ❤️rainnbooks❤️(on a break).
1,366 reviews86 followers
July 7, 2021
Oh my god, what an absolutely riveting read by Steve Cavanagh.

Book#6 in the Eddie Flynn series, which is fine to be read as stand-alone, the Devil’s Advocate is gonna grab you by your throat and never let go! The opening chapter is chilling but that is just the beginning, as Eddie becomes involved in a murder case in the small town of Buckstown in Alabama. Steve Cavanagh captures the small town so brilliantly that the reader is made to sweat in rivulets reaching this highly antagonistic place. The pacing of the story in the first few chapters is so intense that I did forcefully take a break from reading and walked around to keep my galloping heart at a steady rhythm.

The case is gonna be the toughest in Eddie’s career, the town as a whole has already condemned Andy Dubois to a guilty verdict, the DA is an overzealous murderer hell-bent on getting the death row for Andy, there are 2 confessions, DNA evidence linking Andy to the crime and Eddie has come into the scene after the representing lawyer goes missing. On the face of such irreversible stacks piled up like a tower, Eddie and Harry arrive to find themselves with no rooms to stay and no diners ready to serve food. With the sweltering heat ready to take the skin off their backs, Eddie with Harry, Kate, and Bloch has no choice but to be as cunning and wily as the prosecutor’s team.

This is my second book by Steve Cavanagh and Eddie Flynn has become one of my favorite characters. His quirky ways to get things done, the sleight of hand tricks he conjures to overcome the odds against him are so crafty that one can’t help but cheer him on from the stands. And it is just not Eddie, I loved how the author gives Kate to shine in the courtroom too, one of the scenes where she cross-examines the medical examiner is simply pure gold. The complex story does take a turn with white supremacism and bigotry coming into play and honestly, it was a relief to breathe a little easier with scenes shifting from the courtroom to the hidden motive behind the murder of Skylar Edwards.

Engrossing 🌪� 🌪� 🌪� 🌪� 🌪�

Highly recommended legal thriller.

Many thanks to Net Galley, Orion Publishing Group, and the author for a chance to read and review this book. All opinions are expressed voluntarily.

This review is published in my blog , ŷ, Amazon India, Medium.com, Facebook, and Twitter.
Profile Image for Pat.
2,310 reviews492 followers
June 18, 2022
This book is a little different from the other Eddie Flynn books. For one thing, it’s set in Alabama. But let’s go back to the start. Eddie knows some interesting people, one of them is Alexander Berlin a ‘fixer� for a number of alphabet agencies. His most recent ‘fix� was to ensure that Randal Korn was re-elected as the DA of Sunville County. Done and dusted, however, Berlin has since learned that Korn is a sadistic psychopath. He always wins his murder trials and he always get the death penalty. Sunville County has executed more people than any other place in America since Korn became DA. He doesn’t care if the people are innocent or guilty. He just loooooves to watch them fry in the electric chair.

He is about to prosecute the case of a young black man, Andy Dubois, who allegedly killed a young white woman, Skylar Edwards. There is a seemingly insurmountable mountain of evidence against him but that’s never stopped Eddie from going in to bat against the underdog. He does tell Berlin it will a hard case to win. Berlin has many resources available to him and has a bunch of strings he can pull. Eddie will need those strings pulled hard if he is to take on this case.

So Eddie and his friend and mentor, former judge Harry Forbes (who now works as a consultant on Eddie’s cases), head to Alabama. It is clear from the start that they are most unwelcome in the town. Neither of the hotels, which have vacancy signs lit, will give them a room. Everyone in the town is convinced of Andy’s guilt. The next day Eddie’s law partner, Kate Brooks, and their investigator, former police officer Bloch, arrive in town. At least they manage to swing some rooms for them.

Eddie straightaway has some major concerns about how the police handled the case and about missing evidence. As Eddie’s team follow every lead they uncover a toxic brew of corruption blanketing the town. There more murders, blackmail, intimidation, lies, greed and outright criminality. Who is pulling these strings. Let’s hope Eddie’s strings are stronger than the puppet master of Sunville’s strings.

The court case is, as usual, brilliantly conceived and portrayed but this is where I will leave you. Although maybe a teeny bit not as good as the earlier books, it was another stellar entry in the series. This was a buddy read with my friends Jayme, Ceecee and DeAnn (I hope I haven’t missed anyone). Be sure to read their reviews as well.
Profile Image for DeAnn.
1,640 reviews
June 20, 2022
4 southern stars

Take a sadistic District Attorney and picture him in a small county in Alabama. He is a master at obtaining death sentences in every one of his murder cases. Until he meets Eddie Flynn.

Eddie and his team get the opposite of a warm southern welcome when they arrive in town, and it is like getting blood from a stone to help their client.

Skylar Edwards, a promising young woman, has been brutally murdered and her co-worker Andy Dubois is accused of the crime. It doesn't seem to matter that his confession was coerced or that there are questionable witnesses. The evidence against Andy seems a bit too convenient but is tough to overcome. DA Randal Korn feels he has another death row sentence all sown up. How can Andy get a fair trial when everyone is convinced that he's guilty?

I enjoyed getting to know more of Eddie's team in this one, Kate and Bloch, and of course I love Judge Harry. I did want more court room time and more of Eddie's legal maneuvering.

This book shows Steve Cavanagh's growth as a writer and his passion to write about the death penalty, corruption, white supremacy, and how innocent men and women can be sent to jail and to death. Frightening stuff and very difficult to read at times.

This is a continuing group read with Pat, Ceecee and Jayme. Check out their thoughts and we are all awaiting publication of the next in the series!
Profile Image for Terence M - [Quot libros, quam breve tempus!].
635 reviews323 followers
May 30, 2022
2.5 ^ 3.0-Stars - I ‘almost� liked it
Steve Cavanagh - Eddie Flynn #6 - “The Devil’s Advocate�
A rambling book that seemed to take me forever to listen to, probably because I found it difficult to become invested in a two bad-guys story that never really interested me, with nary a character about whom I really cared.
The latter 20% or so dragged on and on, and I felt a renewing desire to chuck it on the “dnf� shelf, a temptation that I am proud, in a way, to have resisted.
The book’s narration was satisfactory, but nothing more than that.
Overall, “The Devil’s Advocate� was pretty much a waste of my ever-diminishing audiobook listening time.
Profile Image for Dora Koutsoukou .
2,183 reviews664 followers
September 2, 2021
4 😯😯😯😯⭐️s❗️

I liked TDA, it was greatly developed and intriguing, but didn’t give me the thrill the previous parts of the Eddie Flynn series did.
I wanted more Eddie and more court room scenes.

Regardless, I already can’t wait for the next Eddie Flynn case!!!😱😱
Profile Image for Ceecee.
2,548 reviews2,144 followers
June 18, 2022
Eddie Flynn #6

In this instalment of the excellent series Eddie and his team take on Randall Korn, the DA of Sunville Co, Alabama. Korn is a killer using his office as cover as he’s sent more people to their deaths than any other DA. Andy Dubois is arrested by sheriff Colt Lomax for the murder of popular Skylar Edwards, the town is out for revenge and Andy has little hope of a fair trial. Shadowy government fixer Alexander Berlin persuade Eddie to take the case when Andy‘s lawyer disappears. The team are about as welcome as Typhoid Mary. Can the “cavalry� save Andy?

This is a tough no holds barred gripping read from the tense and shocking start. There is a lot on show here to make it gritty reading from racism to sadism, corruption, violence and murder, there are monsters and unholy alliances as the devil seems to ride out. A lot of it freezes your blood as you appreciate that in this case justice and the law are not the same thing. There are some breathtaking plot twists and many a jaw dropper.

I love the characters and in this one Kate, Harry and Bloch are much more evident, there’s less Eddie in the courtroom and although it’s great they have a larger role it’s the courtroom and Eddies performances I enjoy. If I’m honest as it builds to the end it feels as if it falls way too easily almost toppling like a row of dominoes. I do enjoy it but not as much as the last two which were five star reads.

This was an enjoyable buddy read with Jayme, Pat and DeAnn.
Profile Image for Nina (ninjasbooks).
1,382 reviews1,278 followers
August 18, 2021
This series just becomes better and better. Superb writing and nail-biting suspense. Intelligent and emotional. Can’t find any faults with it.
Profile Image for Aitor Castrillo.
Author2 books1,292 followers
February 25, 2024
Creo que ya lo he dicho varias veces por aquí: me gustan los thrillers judiciales. En el club de lectura “Se ha escrito un crimen� nos lo hemos pasado en grande comentando El abogado del diablo.

Steve Cavanagh y Eddie Flynn son muy cracks cada uno en los suyo. De las tres novelas que he leído de Cavanagh, mi oro es para 13, la plata para Cincuenta cincuenta y el bronce para El abogado del diablo.

Entretenidísimo en cualquier caso.
Profile Image for Alan Cotterell.
551 reviews188 followers
August 11, 2021
Thank you to Steve Cavanagh, the publishers and Netgalley for an ARC, in exchange for an honest review.

This is the latest case and probably his toughest so far for Eddie Flynn one-time con artist and now Defence lawyer, you want when everything is against you. And everything is against the defendant in this case. In small town Alabama, a young African American is framed for the murder of a young white girl, with DNA evidence, 2 confessions and a DA, and sheriff who will do anything to get the conviction and extend the DA’s record-breaking execution legacy. If that wasn’t enough there is a group of white supremacists led by The Pastor with a deadly agenda.

As you may have guessed it has elements that draw parallels between the 1930s Alabama depicted in To Kill a Mockingbird, and modern America. The District Attorney Randal Korn doesn’t care if the defendant is innocent or guilty, he goes for the death penalty in every case. With no moral scruples as to how he gets there.

Another fantastic addition to the series. As always Eddie Flynn stories are fast paced, full of tension, thrills, suspense and twists. Even Eddie himself doubts he can come out of this one ahead, or even alive at times. But the principles he lives by will not let him give up. Highly recommended whether you are new to this series or are a long-standing fan. Just don’t plan to go anywhere until you have finished it.
Profile Image for Matt.
4,440 reviews13k followers
November 14, 2021
Let’s go for 4.5 stars!

Back for another adventure in the world of Eddie Flynn, I reached for the latest novel by Steve Cavanagh. There is a gritty nature to these tales, in which Cavanagh shows how his protagonist has left a life of crime to help those who are being railroaded by the state. When Flynn is approached by an acquaintance to help with a crooked D.A. in rural Alabama, he cannot help but take on the case. Known for sending people to the electric chair, even if the evidence is flimsy, Randal Korn has made a name for himself. When Flynn arrives to defend a young man who is accused of murder, there are clashes from the outset. It’s only later that the truth about Korn comes to light, though Flynn may be powerless to stop it. Cavanagh does it again with a fabulously entertaining legal thriller that kept me up late into the night!

Eddie Flynn may have been a thief in his past life, but he is more than making up for it now, serving as a gritty defence attorney. When Flynn is approached by someone with deep connections to the Federal Government, he is intrigued to hear about something happening in Alabama. A fixed-election hoisted Randal Korn into the role of District Attorney, but since taking over, Korn has abused his power and earned the moniker ‘King of Death Row�, as he has ensured numerous people find their way to the electric chair. These convictions are sometimes based on flimsy evidence and the governor seems happy to oblige.

A young man stands accused of killing a woman he knew, though the facts are not as cut and dry as they would seem. Flynn and his team agree to make their way down around Mobile to look into the case, but are greeted with a less than pleasant welcome. It would seem that many in town have already made up their minds, fuelled by the rhetoric that Randal Korn has been spouting. Flynn finds himself on the wrong end of the local law and order, ending up touring the jail cells for a time.

After securing himself as defence counsel, Flynn attempts to piece together a courtroom plan, but is stymied at every turn. Others turn up dead, their bodies strewn about and possibly murdered, though suicide cannot be discounted. Korn pushes to ensure Flynn cannot do his job, pulling strings in a way that his fingerprints will not be found.

As the trial opens, Korn and Flynn face-off, each counting on victory. However, neither man can fully comprehend how far the other will go to ensure a tick in the win column. All this, while Korn holds a deep secret that only a handful know, namely, the White Camellia. Not only is Korn prosecuting these cases, he is behind the crimes themselves. And, should he fail to watch himself, Eddie Flynn may be the next victim. A chilling story that kept me reading and wanting more!

I stumbled upon Steve Cavanagh’s work a few years ago and binge-read all I could at the time. Eddie Flynn proves to be such a great protagonist and the legal angles of each novel held my attention like few have in recent years. I could not get enough of the legal plots and how effectively they developed in short order. Cavanagh has proven to be one of the great writers in his genre and I am always happy to pick up one of his books when I can find them.

Eddie Flynn has a wonderful backstory, which is developed in the early novels of this series. While never forgetting where he came from, Flynn has turned his life around and tries to help those who truly need legal assistance. His grit is like no other, using brains but also allowing some brawn when the situation begs for it. He has a strong passion for his profession, but is not entirely devoid of emotion, though he prefers not to remember all he lost during those criminal years. There is much to this man, who risks it all for those he defends, and I can only hope there is more to come.

Steve Cavanagh may not be American, but his novels sure ring true to the US justice system. Powerful storylines emerge with strong characters, quick narratives, and plot twists that keep things interesting. While the US legal thriller is surely an oft-penned genre, Cavanagh finds a way to make the stories his own. I get lost in the narrative and find things as realistic as can be, without being overly predictable, layering ideas and offering strong social commentary. I have come to recommend him to many who love the genre and only hope others will see my reviews and squeeze onto the bandwagon that is his fan club.

Kudos, Mr. Cavanagh, for another great piece. A crowded genre, for sure, but your storytelling abilities help you stand out in the crowd!

Love/hate the review? An ever-growing collection of others appears at:


A Book for All Seasons, a different sort of Book Challenge: /group/show/...
Profile Image for Helga.
1,262 reviews360 followers
May 4, 2023
Monsters are not born, they are created.

He doesn’t need to go looking for trouble. Trouble has a way of finding him all by itself.
This time Eddie Flynn finds himself in Buckstown, Alabama, where not only he and his team should prove the innocence of a young man convicted of murder, but also work their magic to put an end to a powerful prosecutor’s predilection to kill.
Profile Image for Danielle-Gemma&#x1f49c;.
396 reviews24 followers
October 9, 2021
Steve Cavangh just when I was feeling Eddie Flynn withdrawals BAM number 6 comes out!
This book is absolutely brilliant, cleverly written, fast paced and not full of legal jargon you can’t understand!
This series will always have a place in my heart and I full recommend that you read them start to finish x
Profile Image for Damo.
480 reviews64 followers
August 20, 2023
Faced with physical evidence that’s almost impossible to overcome and a DA who is intent on increasing the number of death penalty cases he’s won, Eddie Flynn has the most difficult case of his career in front of him.

The Devil’s Advocate is the 6th book in the Eddie Flynn series featuring the ex-con man turned brilliant defense attorney. He, along with his ever-growing team of professionals, are charged with leaving New York City and taking a small-town Alabama courtroom by storm. This is a story that’s designed to get your blood boiling as injustice is piled upon racism flat-out criminal behaviour. It’s yet another stunner that continues to mark the series as one of the best modern legal thriller series out there.

Eddie has been ordered to the small town of Buckstown, Alabama where a young black man, Andy Dubois, is accused of murdering Skylar Edwards, a young white woman with whom he worked. The murder was brutal, had the hallmarks of ritualistic overtones and seemingly performed by someone who knew the victim. The DA, Randall Korn, appears to have the case sewn up with DNA evidence as well as two separate documented confessions from young Andy. Not only that, Korn’s seeking the death penalty and history shows that when Korn seeks the death penalty, Korn gets the death penalty.

When it comes to bad guys, Korn is about as evil as they come, he even gives off a subtle aroma of death and decay. He looms as the ultimate adversary for Flynn and his compatriots. Not only that, it appears he’s got an ally in the form of a man who calls himself The Pastor and it seems he’s as ruthless as Korn and tends to provide help at unexpected moments in this most unorthodox legal thriller.

Together with his extremely able co-attorney Kate Brooks, former judge Harry Ford and their somewhat scarily effective investigator Bloch, the team sets about attempting to do the impossible, pick holes in the seemingly impregnable fortress of the prosecution’s case. And, when you put all of the outside noise to one side, it’s the action in the courtroom where the true beauty of this series lies. Picking apart rock solid evidence strand by strand has never been more fascinating.

This is another fast-paced thriller that combines repugnant characters representing some of the most backward-thinking logic possible with edgy, thoughtful counterattack that manages to sidestep obstacles with grace. As ever, Cavanagh also managed to hit me with some completely unexpected twists that threw me completely off balance. At one point I had to re-read an entire chapter as I adjusted my assumptions over what I thought was happening.

Dark themes steeped in southern gothic overtones, the most revolting bad guys imaginable, a beautifully crafted plot that demanded my complete attention. The Devil’s Advocate confirms Eddie Flynn as one of my favourite modern crime fiction characters.
Profile Image for Sarah Faichney.
838 reviews29 followers
June 18, 2021
I will drop any (and every) book for a new Steve Cavanagh. I will read until my eyes are hanging out of my head and I will love every minute of it! So you can imagine my reaction on being chosen as one of the first 100 reviewers to be granted access to the new Eddie Flynn via NetGalley. It went a bit like this 😲😁👏🏻🙌🏻💃🏻🎉

But did the book rise to meet my expectations, and the extraordinarily high bar set by Cavanagh himself? Of course it did! "The Devil's Advocate" takes us to the deep South where the Alabama heat shimmers from every page. Eddie has assembled a crack team around him and this is their time to shine. As for the great man himself, I love his sheer balls-out boldness and enviably brilliant brain. In terms of the supporting cast, District Attorney Randal Korn is one creepy dude. Like a big, lanky Frank Sidebottom, but villainous.

"The Devil's Advocate" is topical and sickeningly plausible. I enjoyed the inclusion of an Author's Note which provides clarification and context to some of the elements within.

Once again, Cavanagh proves himself to be a master plotter and supreme builder of tension. My nerves were jangling (and I'm sure I had adrenal fatigue) by the end of the book. And so begins the unbearable wait for the next instalment�
Profile Image for Geevee.
421 reviews320 followers
May 3, 2022
Eddie and his small team take a case away from their home turf in Alabama. The case looks bleak as their defendant is charged with murdering a young woman. The sentence being sought by the District Attorney is death by electric chair. The odds of securing a not guilty verdict look very difficult indeed given the evidence in play.

Steve Cavanagh has written another Eddie Flynn story that provides a believable plot with a variety of characters who have many facets and needs. These characters, helped along with some pointers and events from the author that keep America's current and historic racial troubles in view, give a cross spectrum of small-town life through the eyes of financially struggling families and businesses where close-knit (or everyone knows everyone's business) community and big personalities rub along within Mobile county, Alabama.

Overall, the plotline and story develops well. Eddie and the team, of course get into scrapes but these help push the events along and allows the ever inventive, and frankly clever, Steve Cavanagh to create a number of surprises.

There was one aspect I felt a little contrived near to the end that for me was an unnecessary element and hence my three star rating (which means I liked the book as per the GR rating descriptors). However, with that said, The Devil's Advocate is another good and enjoyable Eddie Flynn book to while away an evening or two.
Profile Image for Paul Ataua.
1,980 reviews236 followers
June 4, 2022
Defense attorney Eddie Flynn comes up against a district attorney who has sent more men to their deaths than anyone in history. If that is not enough, his team find themselves confronting a white supremacist group with an evil project. It’s all is a little over the top, but it works and keeps you there to the end. The best thing about the book is the team itself. Eddie, Kate, Block, and Harry are all characters you find yourself rooting for. Good read, a little too drawn out, but a good read.
Profile Image for Mindy Brouse.
115 reviews145 followers
November 24, 2021
Buckle up! The Devil's Advocate by Steve Cavanaugh, 6th in the Eddie Flynn series I’ve raved about. I’ve read and own all of them. Ordered this from Blackwells. This pains me. If you want a book that is full of stereotypes, inflames prejudices, pegs Black characters as victims only, makes all white people as blatant racists, has a white savior mentality, has Northern savior mindset, has no other black characters except the victim &his mom, frames religion as fanatic idiocy, and makes the South cowards, this is a book for you. I'm heartbroken & mad. Cavanaugh had a beautiful goal (bringing attention to a fact that 5 prosecutors are responsible for about 15% of US death row convictions), BUT instead makes the issue into some kind of creepy religious thing. The issue is totally worth writing about, but needs to be done in a way that is going to help readers believe the struggle/ issue is real instead of making it look like it's an outlandish action by cult people. I'm not a fan of disparaging ANY entire area or culture. People are complicated. It's what I love most about S.A. Cosby, author of Razorblade Tears. As a Southerner, I love that book. He brings nuance, complicated characters, issues-all kinds of things we need to face/ deal with in the South.

Then usual wonderful Eddie Flynn characters and lot twists are there, for sure. But it’s all overshadowed by everything else.

The Devil’s Advocate has high ratings right now, but I wonder if it's bc we're willing to overlook things when we love a series/an author and/or because often we enjoy books that say ugly things we believe. We can all be guilty of preferring lashing out instead of challenging respectfully.

Books can change minds, equip us, empower us though. Sadly, Cavanaugh stepped out of his lane (visiting Alabama only, since he lives in Ireland) & chose to take the easy way out & write to caricatures. I really couldn't be more disappointed.

If you want great Southern books by those who are seeking to bring honest looks, yet real characters, all the layers needed, I suggest S.A. Cosby & his recs (I reached out to him to ask)-David Joy, Brian Panowich, Laura Hightower, Alice Walker, Ernest J. Gaines and Deesha Philyaw. Y'all, we have to be brave readers & admit when we want to take a path of least resistance. On tough topics, we need to choose otherwise.

I even sent my copy to a bookseller to see if I was off base and she’s even more upset than I am. (S4E17 @currentlyreadingpodcast has full discussion)
Profile Image for Gary.
2,875 reviews416 followers
September 7, 2021
This is the 6th novel in the Eddie Flynn series by author Steve Cavanagh. The character Eddie Flynn is a great character to write a series of books about. Eddie Flynn used to be a con artist and now makes his living as a lawyer. You may think that this is a complete career change but it turns out the two aren’t that different. These novels are fast paced, quirky, humorous at times and have great characters. I love this series by author Steve Cavanagh and find them very entertaining.

Randal Korn is the District Attorney that has sent more men to their deaths than any district attorney in the history of the United States. Randal Korn gets deep satisfaction when he watching convicted men die by sending them to the electric chair. In the latest case a young woman is killed and the police quickly arrest a young black man named Andy Dubois with more than a hint of something fishy going on to obtain a rapid conviction. Eddie Flynn and his team, friend Harry, investigator Bloch and lawyer Kate are appointed to defend Andy and quickly sense that Andy is innocent and being framed. Randal Korn holds a lot of power and it is going to take everything Eddie Flynn has in his arsenal to stop this injustice.

This is an exciting series with some excellent characters and plenty of action. Pushes the limits of belief but great reading all the same.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,496 reviews

Join the discussion

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.