Rating: Summary: It's just my opinion Review: I loved this book! Thought it was one of Grisham's best. The charaters are so real I could picture them in my mind (and I must admit I was imagining who could play them in the movie). The development of J.William Traynor to Willie Traynor is believeable and interesting. The friendship between Willie and Miss Callie is sweet. I wonder how much of it was based on Willie never having a mother. I cried a little at the end which I don't remember doing while reading any of Mr.Grisham's other books.
Rating: Summary: Grisham returns to fine form... Review: With 'The Last Juror', John Grisham has delivered a novel that will please fans of both his courtroom dramas and his other more literary works. While a slower-moving story than some of his other legal thrillers, I found the combination of the courtroom scenes juxtaposed with the snapshots of Clanton life circa the 'Old South/New South' era to be very effective. You really feel as if you get to know (and care for) the main characters...especially Willie Traynor and Callie.Pick this one up and give it a try...you shouldn't be disappointed!!
Rating: Summary: One of John Grisham's Best Review: I am a John Grisham fan and have liked all of his books. The Last Juror was one of my favorites because of all of the different themes that are developed in the book. The main character is a "wet behind the ears" northerner who moves to a southern town and buys the local small town newspaper. The book addresses racism, politics, religion, small town life, family, friendship and much more. It's not just entertaining - it gives you something to think about.
Rating: Summary: Read it for the small town values Review: In his latest novel, John Grisham has returned to the small town of Clanton, Mississippi, the scene of his first book A TIME TO KILL. Once again he has proven that he has the knack of drawing you into the book, compelling you to read more. I found that this was both good and bad in the case of THE LAST JUROR, good because I always had the sense that something was about to happen and I was desperate to find out what it was. Bad because, more often than not, I was left hanging. Covering the years 1970 to 1979, it's written in the first person from the point of view of Willie Traynor, a young outsider to the town who has just purchased the town newspaper. It's through his eyes that all the events in Clanton are reported. The big story of the day was the rape and murder of a young local woman who was able to identify her attacker as Danny Padgitt to her next-door neighbour. Much is made of the powerful and infinitely corrupt Padgitt family. We hear how dangerous they are when they're crossed, how ruthless they are when dealing with invaders to their land. They are an ever-present, menacing storm cloud lurking on the horizon of the peaceful town of Clanton. Traynor, as an outspoken mouthpiece against Danny Padgitt looks to have put himself firmly within the Padgitt's sights, as have the potential jurors for the trial. Callie Ruffin is the last juror chosen for the Danny Padgitt trial. She is a notable selection because she is the first black juror chosen in Ford County and she is a god-fearing mother of eight adult children and a friend of Willie Traynor. She is a fascinating character and her past is drawn out over a series of extravagant home cooked lunchtime meals that she prepared for Willie. As it turns out, the trial of Danny Padgitt is over one-third of the way into the book. From that point on it really reads like a study of life in a southern small town during the 1970's. Consequently the pace of the book settles down to match the comfortable lifestyle that comes with living in a small town. While this is fine and pleasant enough, it all became a bit frustrating after being revved up by the frenetic activity in the opening and the continual references of retribution that could possibly come from the Padgitt family. Admittedly, we do see some action later in the book, but these sequences too are punctuated by long pauses of inactivity. So much so that rather than building up tension and suspense, I found that it had the opposite effect and it was more a sense of relief that something was happening that I felt. I suppose the most damning observation I could make is the realisation that the anecdotes told to Willie about the misdeeds of the Padgitt family sounded a lot more interesting than the actual events of the book. The story of sheriff's deputies going missing on Padgitt land appeals to me a lot more than the manoeuvrings of minor politicians in an election race. It also seems that Grisham's chronic ending problem is continuing. I've been disappointed in the way Grisham has ended his books in the past (notably in THE FIRM, THE CLIENT and THE SUMMONS), often leaving the whole story unfinished at the final full stop. I felt that he did it again here. After meandering through town learning about every religious belief in the county, renovating Willie's house in record slowness and drawing out the discussion of whether or not to sell the newspaper, we were suddenly nearing the 350-page that appears to be Grisham's limit. Before I knew it, everything was wrapped up in a clumsy package and the book was finished. Long and carefully constructed plotlines were cut without a by your leave and characters who had become very familiar were abandoned. As mentioned at the start of the review, Clanton Mississippi was the setting of Grisham's first book, A TIME TO KILL and as such, we are reacquainted with a few of the characters from that book. Making his reappearance is Harry Rex Vonner, lawyer and source of all sorts of useful local knowledge for Traynor. Also, there's the deliciously unscrupulous defence attorney, Lucien Wilbanks, one of the better "man you love to hate" characters I've come across. Smaller appearances are made by D.A. Rufus Buckley and Judge Omar Noose who both have much larger roles in Grisham's earlier book. All is not lost with THE LAST JUROR. Read it for the pleasant imagery of rural living in Mississippi. Relax on Callie Ruffin's front porch over a delicious home-cooked meal. Delight in the increasingly profitable newspaper business built by Willie Traynor. But don't go looking for a tension-charged mystery.
Rating: Summary: Grisham at the top of his game Review: "The Last Juror" may be John Grisham's best work since "A Time to Kill." If there is anything Grisham understands it is the small town south and the lawyers and judges who inhabit them. Here, he adds a three-dimensional 23 year old newspaperman, Willie Traynor, into the mix. Willie is an interesting fellow, whom we see grow from a callow youth with a rich grandmother into a mature and responsible -- not to mention highly successful -- newspaper publisher. The story turns on the threat to the jury that convicts him by a vicious rapist and murderer, Danny Padgitt, and the subsequent deaths of several of those jurors - shortly after Padgitt's parole from prison after only nine years. Grisham gives us a clever, exciting story that is very different from what you might expect, in more ways than one.
Rating: Summary: Big mistake - I read A Time To Kill, then this Review: Grisham just seems to have run out of literary steam. A Time To Kill, and his novels through Pelican Brief, keep the reader interested and curious in the action, the people, and the outcomes. The characterizations and dialogue are lively and sharp. The Last Juror, even with the first person perspective feels distanced and uninvolved. I finally broke down and bought it because some editorial reviews promised hope of the old fire, but I'm putting it back on the market and re-reading some old Dick Francis stories....
Rating: Summary: HOH, HUM!!!!! Review: Not one of Grisham's best, but it was OK. The Thursday lunches at Miss Callies kept me hungry enough to read more. It is a good read, but doesn't compare to Grisham's earlier work.
Rating: Summary: Unusual and REFRESHING!!! Review: As an aspiring journalist I love the way Grisham wrote "The Last Juror" from the point of view of a young, green newspaper editor! It was a refreshing turn from his usual main characters, the lawyers. The suspense of the trial and the ensuing events were not the focus of the story as it implies on the cover (a mistake that was no doubt made by the copywriters and not Grisham himself), so do not get your hopes up for a real thriller like "A Time to Kill." However, the emotional pull between Willie Traynor and Miss Callie more than make up for the mishap of the cover teaser. I am severely disheartened by the fact that so many people are giving this novel poor reviews. In my opinion, "The Last Juror" is one of the freshest novels I have read in a long time and the choice to approach the legal system from a different point of view was a magnificent choice on the part of John Grisham! I couldn't put it down!!!
Rating: Summary: Clanton is a BUSY town! Review: I have ALL of John Grisham's novels and this is the second one written about Clanton Mississippi! Murder(and mayhem) are the topics in two of his novels. I was familiar with one character in this novel, lawyer Harry Rex Vonner, also from "A Time to Kill". The other characters in this book were well fleshed-out. This book was written from the point of view of a young newspaper publisher, not a lawyer, so it was "different" from the usually brilliant Grisham legal books. If only John's ATTEMPT at writing this book had been as wonderful as his descriptions of "Miss Callie's cooking", I'd give him 4 stars! I was really looking forward to another 'legal thriller' (as alluded to on the book jacket) but this book did NOT deliver.
Rating: Summary: Small towns rock! Review: I've read all the novels John Grisham has written. I have liked some better better than others, but THE LAST JUROR reeled me in from the beginning. The protaganist is believable, and it is neat to watch him find his voice as he interacts with the residents in a small town. Grisham is meddling in "social history"--he hits class issues, civil rights, gun control, the buying habits of small town USA, and on and on. He has a disclaimer about certain Mississippi/Ford county laws with which he took liberty, but on page 114, he has the first Italians in Ford county loaded into 1904 Ford Model T's at the railroad station. Oops. The first Model T's were built in 1908. I'm glad that John, like Willie, has made lots of money doing what he likes to do. Now he has the resources to do a little experimenting. In my opinion, Grisham is never a dull read!
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