Inheritance Lost

Inheritance Lost is a courtroom novel, but it’s really about the afterlife of theft. Author C. Anthony Sherman opens with Isaac Simon being forced to sign away his land over a Bible under armed pressure, then carries that wound forward more than a century into a civil case brought by Dexter Simon against the descendants and institutions that profited from it. What follows is a legal drama built not just on evidence, testimony, and strategy, but on a larger question the book keeps worrying like a nerve: how long can the law live comfortably beside a wrong once the wrong has finally been named?

Sherman doesn’t treat dispossession as old history, or as a backdrop for suspense. He treats it as a living structure, something that survives by changing its vocabulary. The novel keeps returning to paper as a weapon, to signatures, ledgers, title chains, settlement language, all the cool administrative surfaces that make brutality look respectable. There’s a chilling intelligence in that choice. I also found myself unexpectedly moved by the book’s restraint at key moments. Dexter isn’t written as a swaggering avenger. He feels tired, disciplined, and painfully aware that even a favorable verdict can’t restore what was taken. By the time the jury names the title “historically tainted,” and later Dexter refuses to turn the result into a personal monument, choosing instead to build a registry and a legal structure for others, the novel has earned its sadness. It understands that recognition is not repair, even if recognition matters deeply.

At its best, the prose has a grave rhythm that fits the material beautifully. The opening pages are especially strong, and scenes like Isaac’s coerced signing, Meagan Roulier’s testimony, and Claude Plaine’s unraveling have real voltage. Sherman knows how to land a line. He also knows how to stage a courtroom so that shifts in posture, silence, and timing carry dramatic force. At times, though, the novel leans so hard into solemnity that every exchange arrives with the weight of a pronouncement. I occasionally wanted a little more surprise in the dialogue. Still, even when the book grows overtly declarative, I understood why. This is a novel written in defiance of euphemism. Its strongest passages don’t merely tell a story. They press on the language that has long been used to soften or bury stories like this one.

Inheritance Lost is absorbing, forceful, and genuinely affecting. It’s not subtle about its convictions, but it is thoughtful about consequence, and that distinction matters. I finished it feeling sobered rather than exhilarated, which seems exactly right for a book so concerned with memory, inheritance, and the terrible durability of respectable lies. I’d recommend it most to readers who like courtroom fiction with moral and historical weight, especially anyone interested in land, lineage, and the uneasy distance between legal judgment and justice.

Pages: 266 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GLV1B1C3

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The Literary Titan is an organization of professional editors, writers, and professors that have a passion for the written word. We review fiction and non-fiction books in many different genres, as well as conduct author interviews, and recognize talented authors with our Literary Book Award. We are privileged to work with so many creative authors around the globe.

Posted on April 18, 2026, in Book Reviews, Four Stars and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.

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