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Fueled by alcohol and legal brilliance, Michael Seeley once oversaw his law firm’s most successful litigation. Until it all fell apart. Recklessness and overreach cost him his wife, his job, and likely the life of his last client, a Chinese dissident journalist. After two sober years practicing small-town law in upstate New York, Seeley has earned back most of what he lost: the partnership in his Manhattan law firm, if not his corner office; the wary respect of most of his partners; the lucrative clients—but not the gin-sharpened passion.
Then the renowned Cuban musician Hector Reynoso enters his office with a simple request: help him and six other composers who defined Cuba’s musical golden age of the 1940s and 1950s—the music that made the Buena Vista Social Club internationally famous—reclaim the copyright to their work. When Reynoso goes missing, Seeley’s reluctant promise to help draws him progressively deeper into Havana’s violent underbelly and a decades-long conspiracy that runs from the partners in his firm to the U.S. State Department to Cuba’s security police, who are willing to do anything to suppress the truth. In the heat of Havana, Seeley will lose himself to his worst and best passions as his pursuit of justice becomes a desperate gambit to save not only his composers but the stunning Amaryll, who is playing her own dangerous game.
Other publications by this author
- Congress Should Fix the Copyright Mess
- Copyright on a Clean Slate
- International Legal Materials on Intellectual Property. 2011 edition
- What Is a Copyrighted Work? Why Does It Matter?
- International Copyright: Principles, Law, and Practice. 2nd Edition
- Copyright, Patent, Trademark and Related State Doctrines, Revised 6th ed.
- Goldstein on Copyright, 2010 Updates
- Real Estate Transactions. Statute, Form, and Problem Supplement
- Real Estate Transactions: Cases and Materials on Land Transfer, Development and Finance
- Intellectual Property in Asia: Law, Economics, History and Politics
Author
- Paul Goldstein
- Stanford Law School
- paulgold@stanford.edu
- 650 723.0313