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    <subfield code="a">Haberman, Helen</subfield>
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    <subfield code="a">Justice is a woman</subfield>
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    <subfield code="a">Release date is 2026-02-22</subfield>
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    <subfield code="a">Carla Foust, Adam Buchbinder and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)</subfield>
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    <subfield code="a">"Justice is a woman" by Helen Haberman is a novel written in the mid-20th century. It centers on modest attorney Larry Frank and his brilliant, politically connected friend Arthur H. Bemrose, a famed trial lawyer shaped by the late Judge Haynes. Set in pre-war New York with Washington always on the line, it blends legal strategy, ambition, and media scrutiny with fraught relationships, notably Bemrose&#x2019;s charged attraction to journalist Janice Baldwin and the quieter troubles of Iowa-born Lucy McVail.

The opening of the novel follows Larry into the reverent, marble-trimmed offices once ruled by Judge Haynes, where he meets Tim Hoxter and Tim&#x2019;s young friend Lucy, whose inheritance dispute Bemrose agrees to untangle. Through flashbacks and office talk, we see Bemrose&#x2019;s rise from Haynes&#x2019;s prot&#xE9;g&#xE9; to a lawyer courted by the Attorney-General, his careful handling of clients, and his curious reluctance to bill big winners. A night at Danny&#x2019;s bar shows Arthur unsettled by Janice Baldwin&#x2019;s incisive article invoking Haynes and the Supreme Court, and by his own resistance to &#x201C;brainy&#x201D; women, even as a Storey household party pulls him deeper into her orbit. Larry offers to shoulder Lucy&#x2019;s case, then visits her neat but threadbare West End Avenue home, explains the settlement she&#x2019;ll sign, and quietly notes her gentle composure&#x2014;and her warm rapport with coworker Phil Kenyon&#x2014;against a backdrop of talk about Lend-Lease. Tension peaks at a Downtown Law Club lunch, where Janice announces plans to return to England, Arthur frets over a Washington bill and control, and a barbed exchange drives Larry to walk out. These scenes set the triangle of loyalties and the novel&#x2019;s core concerns&#x2014;law, power, and personal conscience&#x2014;before the larger world crisis fully breaks in. (This is an automatically generated summary.)</subfield>
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    <subfield code="p">Originally published:</subfield>
    <subfield code="c">New York: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1947</subfield>
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    <subfield code="a">Man-woman relationships -- Fiction</subfield>
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    <subfield code="a">World War, 1939-1945 -- United States -- Fiction</subfield>
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    <subfield code="u">https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.298876</subfield>
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