Lincoln's Last Trial: The Murder Case That Propelled Him to the Presidency
by Dan Abrams, David Fisher
Narrated by Dan Abrams, Adam Verner
Why You'll Love This
A murder trial nobody remembers that shaped Lincoln's rise, narrated by the author with the legal precision of someone who spent years unraveling it.
Listen to Lincoln's Last Trial: The Murder Case That Propelled Him to the Presidency on Audible →
About This Book
In the summer of 1859, a young man named Peachy Quinn Harrison stands accused of murder in Springfield, Illinois, and Abraham Lincoln takes the case. What unfolds is not merely a courtroom drama but a pivotal moment in American history: Lincoln, already gaining national attention after his famous debates with Stephen Douglas, risks his carefully built reputation on a trial tangled with personal grief. The victim had read law in Lincoln's own office. The stakes could not be higher as a presidential campaign quietly takes shape around him.
Dan Abrams narrates the bulk of the material with the authority of a seasoned legal journalist, lending weight to the courtroom proceedings and political maneuvering. Adam Verner handles supporting passages with complementary clarity. The dual-narrator approach suits the book's twin tracks of law and biography, and the nearly ten-hour runtime moves with the momentum of a legal thriller. Abrams and Fisher's command of trial detail makes the audio format feel like a front-row seat in that Springfield courthouse.