Aimee Hoben is a lawyer and writer who lives in the woods of Connecticut with her rock-and-roll husband, two moody teenagers, and two bad dogs. She has worked as a land conservation lawyer and a town attorney, as well as in-house counsel at the historic fire insurance company (and Fortune 500 corporation) where Wallace Stevens wrote poems as he walked to work. Her debut novel, The Third Way, was awarded the 2023 IPPY Gold Medal for Popular Fiction and featured in Connecticut Magazine as a recommended read. Aimee’s commentary on political system reform has been featured in the Connecticut Post, the Stamford Advocate, and other publications, in partnership with the election reform organization Represent.Us. She studied English literature at the University of Colorado, and law at the University of Connecticut. She divides her time between northwest Connecticut and Waitsfield, Vermont.
When mega-corporation Unibank threatens to foreclose on her grandmother’s South Dakota farm, Arden Firth fights back with a revolutionary idea. Enlisting the help of an enigmatic law student, Justin Kirish, Arden builds a campaign to abolish corporations in the state. To win, she...
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