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The Last Juror

The Last Juror

List Price: $49.95
Your Price: $32.97
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: boring
Review: I took this book on vacation expecting a great read and it turned out to be a boring tedious read. If not for the Grisham name this book would not be on any best seller list. Reading this book was a chore not a pleasure. I finished the book and was still waiting for something to happen. Dont waste your time

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good
Review: I thought this was Grisham's best book in years. He captured the spirit of the 70s in the deep south while giving the darker aspects those difficult times a light touch. His quirky characters (one of the things he does best)were well written. And, for those of us who loved "A Time to Kill," it was interesting to compare characters in this loose "prequel."

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: suckered
Review: I was in the airport with nothing to read and there was a huge pile of Grisham's books. How bad can it be? Terrible. If it wasn't a "Grisham" it would not be published. He should stop preaching and write a good story.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Grisham fails again!
Review: With all the hype,I really thought Grisham was back. I was wrong. This book drags on with very little excitement and no great charactars. What a waste of money.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Grisham,s always good
Review: I believe John Grisham is truly one of America,s greatest writers , not only one of the most popular. He spoiled me with " King of Torts" , which I believe to be his best and one of the best books I,ve ever read. Bleachers followed and was excellent illustrating how we idolize coaches and team that are successful and overlooking that this same were not always hero,s to their children and friends. The Last Juror is an very good read bringing Grisham back to his boyhood Mississippi. There are a lot of little stories along with the main theme. This is almost the differance between just eating and dining. It,s Good.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: tedious and not up to speed
Review: I am a huge JOhn Grisham fan and thus I was soooo disappointed in this book. It was neither compelling nor mysterious.. The novel reads more like a memoir of life in rural Mississippi.. I had to force myself to finish.. It is not up to the quality of other books by this author. Save your money!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Grisham losing steam?
Review: If you're looking for the typical Grisham "thriller", this is not the book. The Last Juror is disappointing at best! The story that is outlined on the book jacket takes more than one third of the book to unfold. In other words, the book jacket told us the same thing that a full one third of the book told us. The second third is barely readable! It has absolutely nothing to do with the plot. The book is certainly not what the reader is looking for when reading a Grisham novel.

Grisham has indeed earned the financial freedom to discover other genre's, but I wish the publisher wouldn't try to fool the reader into thinking this is another legal thriller.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Return to his Roots!
Review: In this book, John Grisham returns to his southern small town roots such as in "A Time to Kill". This book shows what life is truly like in many small towns in the rural South. I could see many characters that I grew up with incorporated into this story. I think it is one of his best ones lately. John Grisham is an excellent auther and can hold his own with any mystery writer anywhere!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Southern Comfort
Review: What probably throws most people off with this book (and I'm speaking of Grisham fans here) is that it isn't like anything else he's written. "A Painted House" probably comes the closest, but even that's not a good comparison.

The wonderful thing about Grisham is that he's constantly growing and changing--refusing to get tied down to one style or get in some kind of a rut. The problem with this is that his devoted readers want him to always be the same. Tough situation.

But regardless of his style changes, he does remain constant in one way: his books are all done well. The characters are all believable and human, and his prose is finely crafted. The story in "The Last Juror" isn't that shocking, but this is Grisham's attempt to blend his courtroom thrillers with his more "literary" attempts, and it works wonderfully.

Also recommended: McCrae's "Bark of the Dogwood" and Conroy's "Prince of Tides."

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Makes a promise it doesnt deliver
Review: It's apparently true that each great writer has only a few great books in him. For those who enjoy Grisham's story-telling talent and dont care if a book goes absolutely nowhere, "The Last Juror" may be tolerable. But dont lie to us and tell us it's a mystery. Dont tell us it's about a murder and the additional murders that take place when the killer is released from prison. Be honest with us -- tell us it's just a simple, easy-going story about a small-town newspaper guy and the small-town people he meets. I got 7/8 of the way through this one and realized I was just wasting good time on a bad book. I couldnt finish it.


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