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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: 5 stars
Summary: One of the best
Review: Our book club recently voted on the top three books that we've read in the last year. Obviously "The Last Juror" was one, the other two being "Da Vinci" and "Bark of the Dogwood." Of these, "Juror" was our favorite. A few in the group had read some other Grisham novels and we were interested to hear what they thought about them. The consensus was that "Juror" wasn't the page turner "The Firm" was, but that it was miles ahead of some of his other books. Bottomline: Great book--great read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Southern storytelling at its best
Review: In "The Last Juror" Grisham returns to Clanton Mississippi, the setting for "A Time To Kill." When a young widow is brutally raped and murdered, she names her assailant with her last dying breath: Danny Padgitt, a son of the dangerous and powerful crime family that seems to own Clanton. Willie Traynor, the young reporter who buys the local newspaper when it falls into bankrupcy, covers the case in the paper and befriends Miss Callie, the matriarch of the amazing Ruffin family and the first black woman juror in Ford County. Danny is tried and found guilty, but he receives life imprisonment instead of the death penalty. When he is released on parole after only nine years and returns to Clanton, the jurors who convicted him begin to die one by one, and the remaining jurors fear for their lives.

This novel features not only the setting of Grisham's earliest novel, but also the reappearance of its lawyers Lucien Wilbanks and Harry Rex Vonner. It covers some of the same issues of race and criminal justice. But if you are expecting this story to be similar to its predecessor, you might be disappointed. For one thing, the protagonist here is Willie Traynor rather than a lawyer. The story does contain some tense courtroom drama, but that comprises only part of the novel. Instead we see the gentler and softer-hearted Grisham as represented in some of his latest works such as "Bleachers" and "Skipping Christmas." After the fast-paced trial and while Danny is in prison, the story changes direction to indulge in some good old-fashioned Southern storytelling.

Through the voice of newspaper owner Traynor, a northerner who views the town with the eyes of an outsider but who comes to care for its inhabitants, Grisham shows his affection for Southern small town life. Grisham's descriptions and characterizations are so lovingly crafted that I felt I had attended a goat barbecue, sampled some powerful moonshine, sat on the balcony above the town square gossiping with and about the locals, played poker in the backwoods, visited every church in the county, and had lunch on Miss Callie's porch. The story is peppered with humor and folk wisdom. The ending, although sad, is satisfying. I strongly recommend this novel for readers who appreciate both the vintage and newer Grisham works.

Eileen Rieback

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Grisham has lost his touch....
Review: Drivel and more Drivel....Grisham has lost his touch. You can't write good suspense novels using Harlequin Romance Techniques, filling the pages with unsubstantial filler. If you liked "The Pelican Brief", and was unsatisfied with "The Bleachers", then you and I will agree on this one.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good, but for a Grisham book?
Review: I'll be honest, this is the first Grisham book I've read. I though it was a great book, as far as a novel depicting a character and a town, and the changes that both go through over time. However, it wasn't what I expected with my first Grisham novel. The main point of the book was not the murder which happens in the first 20 pages. I will make this comparison: If the film "A Time To Kill" is an exact representatin of the book, and you enjoyed reading the book, then "The Last Juror" is one you want to stay away from

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not Grisham's Best
Review: In "The Last Juror," John Grisham attempts to blend the style of the legal thrillers which made his career with the old-fashioned and atomspheric quality of "The Painted House." The result is not unsuccessful, but it's also not up to Grisham's usual standard.

Grisham tries to capture the feeling of rural Mississippi in the 1970s, but his descriptions aren't very period-specific; the story could be taking place at any point in the past 60 years. Sentences are often confusingly constructed, as if Grisham wrote the novel in a hurry and didn't edit it. Miss Callie is a nicely drawn, complex character, but the rest of the cast is superficial by comparison.

The dust jacket tries to play up the suspense element: "...men and women who served on a jury nine years ago are starting to die one by one--as a killer exacts the ultimate revenge." But don't be fooled: the killing of jurors doesn't begin until the last fifth of the book. I'm terrible at figuring out mysteries, but the identity of this killer was obvious even to me.

Grisham tries to throw too much into the mix: life in rural Mississippi, desegregation, Vietnam, a discourse on Southern churches, an expose of the legal and parole system in Mississippi in the 1970s, a Wal-Mart style incursion -- all in addition to his legal story. There is so much material that nothing can be treated in depth. Nothing, that is, except the marvelous descriptions of Southern cuisine.

"The Last Juror" is an enjoyable read, but it is not up to the quality I have come to expect from such a fine author as John Grisham.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: GRISHAM HAUNTS THE "HALLS OF JUSTICE" AGAIN ... A MASTER
Review: The Last Juror is a very intriguing story and I was pleased to learn more about the southern town of Clanton, Mississippi where Grisham's first novel, A Time to Kill, was also set.
Being a life-long journalist, former newspaper owner, and current author, I particularly related to the newspaper angle in this book.
Grisham is the master of the courtroom, so I'm glad he's back haunting the "halls of justice." It's a page-turner, as I find all of Grisham's work. His superb style and suspenseful "twists and turns" held my interest from beginning to end.
Reviewer - Betty Dravis, author of MILLENNIUM BABE: THE PROPHECY and the soon-to-be-released young adult novel, THE TOONIES INVADE SILICON VALLEY




Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Pleasant to read, if slow
Review: It seems to me that how you rate this unusual Grisham story depends on what kind of story you are judging it as. It you judge it as a fast-paced legal thriller, it's worth only two or three stars. But if you judge it as a historical story of small town life in the deep south, three decades ago, in which most things that happen are very ordinary, except for some events connected to a sensational murder/rape case, then you give it four or five stars. (Since legal thrillers make more money than small town stories, and the publisher is promoting the thriller angle, I'm wondering why the publisher didn't just insist on another legal thriller. Maybe the publisher is so afraid to loose such a lucrative author that he or she just has to publish anything he writes, and Grisham just felt like writing this one.)

The story is not very complicated. In the early 70s, Willie Traynor, after doing poorly at university up north, buys the struggling local newspaper in Clanton, Miss., and spends the next nine years struggling to build its circulation. And as he does so, writing about events in the region, we get to understand the social set up in the deep south in the 70s, with all its race problems. I have never lived in the south, and found his account quite interesting.

The sensational events, related in about a third of the book, involve a brutal rape murder by Danny Padgitt, no-good son of a dubious but wealthy Padgitt clan, whose stronghold is in a river peninsula near the Tennessee state line. Danny is convicted, and goes to jail swearing revenge on the jurors, one of which is an older black woman, Callie Ruffin. Callie is from the other side of the tracks in Clanton, but has unusually successful children, except for one wayward son. Willie covers the story of the murder in detail, in spite of threats from the Padgitt clan. He also becomes a friend of Callie, and uses his newspaper to inform the white community of how smart her children are, and how well they're doing. But nine years later, when a corrupt lawyer gets Danny out of jail, jurors start getting killed, and Callie's life is in danger ....

The writing is very good, and the book is pleasant to read, if slow. I just finished reading the Star Wars Epic "Labyrinth of Evil", and compared with that it's a snail's pace. It's certainly no legal thriller either, but it has a charm all of it's own. I figure it's worth the average of 2-3 stars for a thriller and 4-5 stars for an interesting small town story about a part of the country I know little about. That works out to 3.5 stars, so I'll give it four stars.


Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Not really a legal thriller, but a very enjoyable read...
Review: While I've enjoyed almost every Grisham work, I've always hoped that he would stick to the legal thriller genre that I wanted.

Even with only a small focus on legal issues, I couldn't put _The Last Juror_ down. The main players were at most caricatures of stereotypical people - the extraordinarily educated and well-spoken 1970s Southern Black Woman, the Loser College Grad turned Small Town Millionaire, the corrupt Southern Sheriff, the drinking, gossiping local Southern Lawyer, etc. However, this use of caricatures managed to make an engaging read due to Grisham's knack at good storytelling.

My only negative about this work is that the ending twist is entirely predictable due to what seems to be an odd storyline in the midst of the book.

This 'giveaway' didn't spoil my enjoyment of the work. I do recommend this to people who enjoy Grisham's legal works.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Astonishingly perceptive
Review: Although I've spent most of my adult life in the North (and in foreign countries) I was raised in the rural South many years ago, and can still blend in, all these years later, because I know the customs and manners, the friendliness and suspicions, the respect and tensions and admiration and hatreds and loyalties and betrayals, and the proper way to introduce oneself to a small Southern town where one isn't known, in order to gain prompt acceptance as one of "us" rather than one of "them". I have also served on juries, and know by personal experience the wrenching debates in a jury room when the judge's instructions on the law conflict with the good sense of ordinary people about what verdict is appropriate, given the special circumstances of the case.

Grisham's books sell because they're well written, gripping and entertaining. But I wish to commend two in particular because they portray far better than most novels do the way in which Southern customs work well and the ways they work badly, and because his accounts of grand jury and trial jury deliberations match what I've been involved in.

If you wish to understand the complexities of Southern culture, both good and evil, read "A Time to Kill" and "The Last Juror". How Grisham knows as much as he does, I have no idea, but he portrays details that I know from personal experience, that I have found no other author describing as well.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Good read,
Review: This was a light-hearted book to read. It was fast-paced book. I consider it to be one of Grisham's best. Grisham returned to legal thriller with style after his most recent books (Bleachers, Painted House, etc.). The Juror is presented through the eyes of the local newspaper editor. Like all Grisham books, it comes to a very sudden and abrupt ending, but for a change, it doesn't deviate from the story .In this novel John Grisham has created an intense, fascinating and revealing study of a small southern town, and created lively characters that developed with the story. His details are plentiful. This is a lovely historical fiction.

DISCIPLES OF FORTUNE, THE RUNAWAY JURY


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