Just Mercy (Movie Tie-In Edition) is a memoir by Bryan Stevenson. He shared here a great story of redemption and justice. He is a lawyer, professor of law, and social justice activist from America. As the narrator of this Just Mercy (Movie Tie-In Edition) book, Bryan Stevenson did an acceptable job. He was flat in some places but there were some really good parts of this narration as well.
Bryan Stevenson was a young and bright lawyer at the time when he founded the Equal Justice Initiative. It was an excellent and productive legal practice institute that was dedicated to working to defend all of the most desperate and needy people. Those people include the likes of wrongly condemned, poor, children, and women trapped within the farthest possible reaches of the justice system. The very first case he took from that platform was of Walter McMillan. He was a young man who was given a death sentence for a notorious murder. But, he insisted that he hadn’t committed that crime. That case took Bryan Stevenson into a complicated tangle of conspiracy.
Within that, legal brinkmanship and political machination also had their role to play. Those were the things that completely transformed his understanding of justice and mercy for good.
The first hour of this book will be quite dry but then it picked up the pace and made an exciting listening experience. Just Mercy book at once will be an unforgettable account of a gifted, idealistic, and coming-of-age lawyer. He has been an influential person in the lives of all those whom he had defended. On top of that, this book is also a highly inspiring account for the sake of compassion in the need or pursuit of true justice.