Rating: Summary: True Grisham form!!!! Review: The book starts out in 1970 as a popular newspaper goes under. Enter Willie Traynor, a college dropout that stuns the local community with his quest to raise the newspaper from its ashes. This is soon accomplished with his daring editorial efforts and his coverage of a sadistic rape and murder that has been pinned on the town's secluded bootlegger family. Despite the influence of the Padgitt family in the community, Danny is sent to life in prison. Many viewed this as a tradeoff from the death penalty that he deserved, but regardless the community soon places the crime and the guilty party behind them as they move on with life.Nine years later, Danny's life sentence receives a parole. During this time, Traynor learns to adapt in a town known for unique characters and lack of trust from outsiders. When Danny is once again a free person, Traynor has more than his hands full to report on as jury members are turning up dead. True to Grisham's roots, this book returns to court action that made Grisham a household name. However, there are shades of the sentiment side he has recently displayed in such recent greats like Bleachers. If you like Grisham's work you are going to love this book!!!
Rating: Summary: return to the roots Review: This is a page-turner and I was happy to read a Grisham novel where the action had moved somewhat away from the courtroom for which he is famous. Finally the outcome is kept a secret until the last page and that makes this novel as fantastic as his first. Strongly recommend reading "the last juror", then you love Grisham. He has done it again.
Rating: Summary: I positively loved it. Couldn't put it down. Review: The setting in Mississippi will be familiar to Grisham fans but the story is not a typical suspense/mystery - it's more of a study of human fear and the frailties of the justice system. His books are always so thought-provoking but easy on the eyes and easy to digest quickly. I thought I might be disappointed because I'd built up my expectations for this book. Grisham is truly my favorite author and this one is as per usual, a great - great read. A few have not been up to his best levels but to me this one is as good as some of his best efforts but this plot is different from his typical formula and I thought it was extremely well done.
Rating: Summary: Terrible deceit Review: The jacket cover write-up of this book leads one to believe it is a courtroom thriller, like other Grisham novels. In fact it is not. It is a very slow-paced story of a newspaper in a sleepy little town. If Grisham really had faith in this story he should have hyped it for what it is and drawn an audience with its eyes open, rather than using deceit to lure unsuspecting readers to their 400 page, excruciatingly tiny-printed doom.
Rating: Summary: Revisiting Clanton... Review: As one of the Grisham faihful, I never fail to show up at the bookstore the day the book goes on sale. Needless to say, I was quite excited when The Last Juror hit the shelves. In my usual new Grisham book excitement, I took the book home, fixed some tea and began voraciously reading. I took a decade-long journey with narrator Willie Traynor in a matter of hours, but it took nearly as long to steer my mind back into the reality of my own life. Not only was I not disappointed with The Last Juror, I happened to be more than pleased with the novel. The Last Juror has the usual plot twists and turns of a Grisham novel, but it sets itself apart with excellent character development. The narrator, as usual, is a flawed yet lovable character that might have more in common with the reader than most of us would like to admit. The people our narrator comes in contact with are genuine and each character calls up the memory of someone in my own life. I was looking forward to revisiting Ford County and the rather interesting individuals who populate the small yet drama-filled town of Clanton. Grisham spent a great deal of time developing the setting in the novel and managed to create an even clearer view of this exciting little Mississippi town. From the narrator's visits to local churches to his initial amusement at the quirks of a small town newspaper and the folks who read it, Grisham lets Willie take us into a world that is very real and feels a little like home. His choice of narrator, a privileged outsider, allows him to use Willie to reveal so much about the town that might be taken for granted by someone in their element. If you are looking for an action packed thriller, this might not be the Grisham book for you. However, I strongly recommend The Last Juror to any Grisham fan or to anyone who loves reading a good book that captures the culture and people of a time and a region.
Rating: Summary: Title is misleading, story is fair-to-good Review: The title completely makes no sense although there is a jury that is a major part of this story. Anyway, I enjoyed it better than some reviewers here but I do think the story had more potential. Spoiler alert follows (don't read until you've read the book or decided not to): Wouldn't it have been FAR better to make the killer the sister of the murdered woman, the sister who visited the newspaper man during the trial?
Rating: Summary: Grisham's not so stunning "comeback" Review: This having been his first legal thriller in a couple years, I was not completely impressed by the movement or character development in this book. I have read all of Grisham's books and would easily place this near the bottom of the list. The initial concept is interesting, but his storytelling was lackluster and characters a bit cliched. I kept thinking the "crime family" resembled the Clampetts and his protaganist was unbelievable at times. A lot of the characters were shallow, and the end was disappointing. If you are going to read this, wait for the paperback or get it from the library. Or just re-read the good ones: A Time to Kill, The Client, The Brethren and The Pelican Brief.
Rating: Summary: The Title is NOT Misleading Review: Be wary of those reviews who insist the title is misleading. Those people seem to have missed a pretty obvious point. There absolutely was a "Last Juror" in this book. Without giving anything away, the title refers to the individual who is most responsible for the fate of the defendant.
Rating: Summary: Great Plot & Character Development, So-So Writing Review: I'm a huge fan of John Grisham and have read all but one of his books. That said, I don't think that The Last Juror was as bad as some of the other customer reviewers have made it out to be. I was actually quite excited at the prospect of another of Grisham's stories set in Clanton, Mississippi, the same town in which the best book he's ever written-A Time to Kill-is set. In The Last Juror, Grisham has done his usual fine job in developing interesting, colorful characters and in describing the town and its environs. It's very evident that he's familiar with the local color and has done a good job of capturing the look and feel of a small southern town from the early 70s struggling with with everything from racial prejudice and desegregation to corruption to the blight created when a national superstore chain comes to town. I also found the plot to be very interesting albeit somewhat derivative: a member of a very powerful but reclusive family is tried for and convicted of the rape and murder of a young widow. In prison, he receives preferential treatment and gains early parole. Shortly after his release some members of the jury that convicted him are killed. The story is told from the point of view of a college dropout who owns and operates the town's weekly newspaper. Parenthetically, I understand that Grisham did not want to title the book as it was but caved in to pressure from his publisher. After reading the book, I now uderstand why-the title is somewhat of a misnomer. There is no LAST juror, so just put this issue aside and enjoy the book. Other reviewers have criticized Grisham's writing in this book and I must concede that on some level they're right. The book is divided into three sections, the first of which is as well written as any of Grisham's earlier work. The writing in the second and third parts, however, seem to suggest that Grisham started losing interest in his subject and was just going through the motions. I can't remember any Grisham novel in recent memory that contained so many short chapters. That's too bad, because this book really started out with some promise. After the first few chapters I was raving to my wife that this might be Grisham's best book yet but by the end I realized it was not to be. Overall, I'd rate the Last Juror as a much better novel than some of his more recent efforts like the Testament and The King of Torts, but not quite as good as The Summons or A Time to Kill. While I that Grisham revisits Clanton in subsequent books, I also hope that he puts a little more effort into those visits. But then again, maybe my expectations were too high.
Rating: Summary: Pretty Good, not great.... Review: I like most of John Grisham's book, they are compelling, interesting and suspensful. My favorite is A Time to Kill. The Last Juror was interesting in that it didn't go through a trial from the beginning of the book to the end. In fact, the rape/murder trial in this book lasted just a few pages. Rather it centered on the lives of Willie and his new Clanton, MS. friends, some fun and interesting characters. Willie is fresh out of college and buys a small county newspaper in Clanton, MS with a loan from his grandmother. The story talks of his years there and how he befriended a black, Christian lady and her amazing family during the early 70's in MS. This was my favorite part of the book, reading about Callie and her family and the conversations she and Willie had. She was a great character and certainly made the book for me. Grisham always does a great job of character development--I can always see a picture of them in my mind. It's a good book and kept my interest, but I was a little dissapointed with the end. I felt like there were still stories to tell about what happened to various characters.
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