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A Painted House

A Painted House

List Price: $31.95
Your Price: $20.13
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Overall Good Read
Review: As with all of Grisham's books this one also is a good read. No, it's not suspenseful or anything but it keeps you wanting to turn the page.

My only complaint with this book which others have already noted, is that the narrative is to complex to be coming from a seven year old. An 11-13 years old would have made more sense.

Overall, I would put this book in the middle of the pack. To me his best were The Firm, A Time to Kill, and Pelican Brief. His worst was The Client and The Street Lawyer (Although they both were readable). The rest, in my opinion, are jumbled up in the middle somewhere and so is this book.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Not the work of a professional
Review: If this book had been written by an unknown author, it would be lounging idly at the foot of the non-sellers list. Only the name Grisham has saved it from a fate worse than death.

John Grisham started sliding after 'The Firm' and A Painted House does nothing to slow his descent. I understand his need to get away from the lawyer genre, but a slow action, poor story book is not going to help. I struggled through to the end, hoping for a glimpse of former Grisham glory, but ended up feeling like I'd eaten a plate of stale air - hungry for something more substantial.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Very Good Story
Review: You will notice that reviewers loved or hated this book. My interpretation is that those who hate it don't like the slower pace of this story. The book is more literary in style and not Grisham's usual page-turner fare. If you enjoy a good story and don't insist on a constant high tempo, then I think that you'll enjoy this book.

If you have kids and/or remember your own childhood well, then it is easy to enjoy the book's perspective (told by an intelligent 7-year-old). It's funny to see how he senses the adults' mood, knowing that he can get away with some things on certain days and how only the best behaviour will be accepted on others. The boy can be so perceptive in many ways but just have a young child's understanding in others.

There may have been a few too many loose ends at the end but perhaps Grisham is leaving the door open for a sequel. I'd certainly recommend the book, if you enjoy a good story (not written in the thriller style).

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: I am still waiting for an ending
Review: I am an avid reader and enjoy all of Grisham's books. I think he is a good writer, but not a great writer. I do however have a major problem with every one of his books. It seems as if he reaches a point toward the end of his books and decides he doesn't want to write anymore, so he just ends it. I think A Painted House is his best example of this. I truly loved the book until the ending. In fact, I am still waitng for it to end. There was so much left un-written.. ie. what happened to Ricky?Did Luke and his folks ever get back to Pappy and Gran? What about the Latchers? I felt this book was going to raise Grisham to the next level. Though most of his books are commercially successful, I felt only two were excellent. A Time to Kill, and A Painted House. This could have really been his greatest work, if he had only given it an ending. Oh well John, you keep writing and I'll keep reading.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Outstanding!!!!!!!!!
Review: Splendid! Captivating! Moving! Entertaining! All of these describe Grisham's latest work. Absolutely one of the finest works I've ever read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Enjoyable and Entertaining
Review: The characters were excellently developed with some jumping off the pages. Cowboy and Hank were particularilly menacing. The dialogue was crisp and the story was beleivable. The zeitgeist was captured beautifully, 1952 being made available to the reader with each turn of the page. Young Luke's POV seemed a tad advanced for a 7-year-old, but perhaps some children grow up faster in the conditions described? In my mind, this novel rates as one of Mr. Grisham's top achievments . . . an outstanding work of fiction, and one of the best reads I've indulged in this year.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Where's the lawyers???
Review: This book is not John Grisham's typical work. It wasn't bad, just not what I expect of him so I was quite disappointed. There were no lawyers or courtrooms full of suspence. Actually, I found the story quite boring and felt the main character, Luke, at age 7,was entirely too young for his role in this book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Live every moment of this book
Review: I am an avid reader and I have to tell everyone that this is the BEST book I have ever read! I could not put this book down. I read it in 6 hours and then I was disappointed that I was finished with it. It is so moving and heart warming. You will laugh out loud and then find yourself crying seconds later. The characters and the way the story is told has you living with them in every sentence. I just can't say enough about this book except it is one book that everyone should read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: FABULOUS-A new Grisham genre. Move over Jim Lehrer. Encore!
Review: At first I was a little hesitant to read a Grisham that was not about lawyers and courtroom suspense. But after I got started, I couldn't put it down--finished it in two days at the time that I was testing my college algebra class for finals. Grisham carefully weaves his story around the grinding poverty of mid-1900s Arkansas cotton farmers. Racial & socioeconomic stereotypes are used liberally, but he is telling it "like it was." If you like Jim Lehrer's "One-Eyed Jack", you will love Grisham's Arkansas cotton farmers. It is about people and touches the heart. He develops characters you can care about--and some you can't wait to see meet their just desserts. And the one thing I really liked about it was the way he handled Ricky at the end of the book. One resolution would have been so pathetically predictable that I was hoping he wouldn't use it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Insightful slice of history
Review: A beautiful, insightful journey into the past before the small Delta farms were taken over by mechanization. What other opportunity did children have to learn and accept the differences found in other good people?


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