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Book Details

The Proving Ground

57.1% complete
Copyright © 2025 by Hieronymus, Inc.
2025
Crime; Mystery; Thriller
2025
1 time
See 6
Oart One - The Cage
Chapters 1-12
Part Two - Challenger
Chapters 13-24
Part Three - The First Law
Chapters 25-50
Book Cover
Has a genre Has an extract Has a year read Has a rating In a series 
15028
For Daniel Daly and Roger Mills, for twenty years
of patiently answering the questions
To some it's a stage.
None on file
No comments on file
Extract (may contain spoilers)
JUDGE RUHLIN DELIVERED her rulings by email promptly at nine a.m. Monday.  I was in the Arts District downtown at the warehouse where I had once stored a fleet of Lincolns and that I now used primarily for records storage and as an office.  In terse rulings short on explanatory backup, the judge simply split the decision, giving both sides a win.  She cleared the path for Rikki Patel to testify as a plaintiff's witness in the case but allowed Tidalwaiv to keep its redactions to the discovery material, leaving me to decide whether or not to delay the trial by going with (and paying) a special master to review the thousands of documents and determine what should be removed from redaction.  It was passing the buck.  I had actually thought the opposite rulings would come, that I would lose Patel but get unredacted discovery.  So I didn't know how to react.  If I had lost Patel, I would simply have sent Cisco out to find another person who'd witnessed the inner workings of the company.  Going with a special master would delay the trial by months if not a year or more.  And whether or not I chose to delay things, the rulings gave Tidalwaiv an opportunity to slow the case with their own appeal on the Patel decision.

McEvoy arrived at the warehouse promptly at ten a.m., as I'd instructed him in a text.  I walked him back toward the office, but he stopped when he saw two people behind the mesh of a fenced-off area in one of the storage bays.

"Wait, is that a Faraday cage?" he asked.

"With this case, it's an absolute necessity," I said.

"That was going to be my first suggestion to you.  Can I take a look?"

"Uh, be my guest."

The cage was a twelve-foot-by-twelve-foot cube of chain link.  Across the top was a crosshatch of wires supporting copper mesh that also draped down all four sides of the cage, preventing all manner of electronic intrusion.  Inside was 144 square feet of workspace.  The cage was ground zero for Randolph v. Tidalwaiv.

There was one entrance, through a curtain made of the same copper mesh.  I held it open for McEvoy.

 

Added: 03-Dec-2025
Last Updated: 09-Dec-2025

Publications

 21-Oct-2025
Blackstone Audio, Inc
Book on CD
I read this editionOrder from amazon.comHas a cover imageBook Edition Cover
Date Issued:
21-Oct-2025
Format:
Book on CD
Cover Price:
$45.95
Length:
10 hrs 50 min (387 pages)
Catalog ID:
Zel32a
"Read":
Once
Reading(s):
1)   5 Dec 2025 - 7 Dec 2025
Cover Link(s):
Internal ID:
44042
ISBN:
8-228-57097-X
ISBN-13:
979-8-228-57097-9
Country:
United States
Language:
English
Credits:
Peter Giles  - Narration
Gregg Kulick - Cover Design
Trevillion Images - Cover Photograph
From #1 New York Times bestselling author Michael Connelly, the Lincoln Lawyer is back with a case against an Al company whose product may have been responsible for the murder of a young girl.

Following his "resurrection walk" and need for a new direction, Mickey Haller turns to public-interest litigation, filing a civil lawsuit against an artificial intelligence company whose chatbot told a sixteen-year-old boy that it was okay for him to kill his ex-girlfriend for her disloyalty.

Representing the victim's family, Mickey's case explores the mostly unregulated and exploding Al business and the lack of training guardrails.  Along the way he joins up with a journalist named Jack McEvoy, who wants to be a fly on the wall during the trial in order to write a book about it.  But Mickey puts him to work going through the mountain of printed discovery materials in the case.  McEvoy's digging ultimate delivers the key witness, a whistleblower who has been too afraid to speak up.  The case is fraught with danger because billions are at stake.

It is said that machines became smarter than humans on the day in 1997 that IBM's Deep Blue defeated chess master Garry Kasparov with a gambit called "the knight's sacrifice."  Haller will take a similar gambit in court to defeat the mega forces of the Al industry lined up against him and his clients.

Michael Connelly is the author of thirty-nine previous novels, including New York Times bestsellers The Waiting, Resurrection Walk, and Desert Star.  His books, which include the Harry Bosch series, the Lincoln Lawyer series, and the Renée Ballard series, have sold more than eighty-five million copies worldwide.  Connelly is a former newspaper reporter who has won numerous awards for his journalism and his novels.  He is the executive producer of three television series: Bosch, Bosch: Legacy, and The Lincoln Lawyer.  He spends his time in California and Florida.

Read by Peter Giles
Cover:
Book Cover
Notes and Comments:
9 CDs
Image File
21-Oct-2025
Blackstone Audio, Inc
Book on CD

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  • I try to maintain page numbers for audiobooks even though obviously there aren't any. I do this to keep track of pages read and I try to use the Kindle version page numbers for this.
  • Synopses marked with an asterisk (*) were generated by an AI. There aren't a lot since this is an iffy way to do it - AI seems to make stuff up.
  • When specific publication dates are unknown (ie prefixed with a "Cir"), I try to get the publication date that is closest to the specific printing that I can.
  • When listing chapters, I only list chapters relevant to the story. I will usually leave off Author Notes, Indices, Acknowledgements, etc unless they are relevant to the story or the book is non-fiction.
  • Page numbers on this site are for the end of the main story. I normally do not include appendices, extra material, and other miscellaneous stuff at the end of the book in the page count.






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