While at Stetson, Eleazer founded Elex Publishers, Inc., a company that specializes in reference guides for lawyers and law students. He is an active member of the Florida Bar, and an emeritus member of both the Georgia and District of Columbia Bars. With his extensive background in criminal law and trial work, he decided to weave his experiences into a novel: Savannah Law, a story of the suspense and intrigue surrounding a high-profile criminal trial.
While Eleazer had written
several non-fiction books, he had always been a fiction fan— particularly legal
thrillers by writers like Scott Turow, John Grisham, and Steve Martini. Since
his busy schedule left little time for recreational reading, he enjoyed
listening to audiobooks while commuting and traveling. “Some writers say they
always had a book in them, but I didn’t,” he explains. “While listening to the
audiobooks, I started to wonder if I could write books like those.” He found
himself thinking about plot lines and characters, and before long, a story
began to form. But he soon realized that there was “a steep learning curve”
between writing fiction and non-fiction. “I sometimes found it hard to keep the
reader in mind rather than writing what I wanted,” he says. “I found myself
putting in too much detail, and it’s hard to cut after you’ve devoted so much
time and effort to the writing. I believe most writers face that problem.” He
also realized that a novel required lots of research. According to Eleazer,
“Everything in my book is based on fact. The weather on a particular day, the
furniture in the Savannah courthouse, the monuments in the cemetery, even the
placement of streetlights all had to be researched. I spent a lot of time in
Savannah, but it was something I enjoyed. I was born and raised in Springfield,
Georgia, just 27 miles from Savannah, and it was fun going back and seeing the
changes.”
Savannah Law
is the story of an ambitious law professor's obsession with a female student
and the politically-charged, media-frenzy criminal trial that pits the nation’s
most successful trial lawyer against a prosecution clinic intern. Set in
fictional Savannah College of Law, the book gives readers an intimate glimpse
into the workings of the legal system. “Everything that happens in the book can
and does happen in the courtroom,” Eleazer says. “I thought about the things
I’d experienced and tried to put myself into each scenario. I also wanted to
put to the test actual legal and ethical dilemmas that lawyers find themselves
in and how to handle those challenges professionally and responsibly.” Eleazer’s
efforts have been rewarded. Savannah Law
was awarded the 2010 Gold Medal for
Adult Fiction by the Florida Publishers Association and was a Finalist for Best
New Fiction in the 2010 International Book Awards.
While researching federal and
state legislation for his legal publishing company kept him busy, he found time
in 2012 to pen and publish a sequel to Savannah
Law titled The Indictments. A
brazen robbery by a masked man at one of Savannah’s finest restaurants results
in the murder of a teenage girl and murder indictments against two defendants.
The assistant DA assigned to the case believes one indictment is without merit,
and his attempt to have it dismissed threatens both his career and his life.
Characters from Savannah Law return
to the Chatham County Courthouse to battle once again as prosecutors and
defense counsel in the two criminal trials featured in the novel.
Eleazer is now at work on a
third novel, tentatively titled The Two
Witness Rule. Of course, all the action occurs in his favorite city,
Savannah. The trials will take place once more in the Chatham County
Courthouse, and readers of his previous novels will have the opportunity to
again meet and cheer on their favorite characters as well as jeer the villains.
The publication date is slated for early 2015.
For Eleazer, the fun in
writing legal thrillers is “taking cases, putting myself into the situation,
and thinking about what the characters would really do.” He hopes his stories will make readers think
about how they would handle similar dilemmas in their own lives. But ultimately, he wants readers to close his
books and say, “That was a good journey with a satisfying ending and a lot of
fun along the way.”
For more information, go to www.williameleazer.com.
For more information, go to www.williameleazer.com.
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