In 1984 at the De Soto County courthouse in Hernando, Mississippi, a 29 year old Democrat legislator who had finished law school three years ago, witnessed the testimony of a twelve year old rape victim .The legislator then thought about what would have happened had the rape victim's father killed the accused. He began writing a crime fiction novel built on this idea. The rest is not just History. Its a lot more than that. What resulted was the beginning of a spell binding collection of law based crime thrillers from the man who was not long ago (before a bunch of mug faced magicians took over) the most read American author - John Ray Grisham. And this post is a tribute to the man who should by now be privileged to know that Krish King Nishanth has read every word of every thing ever written by him.
The first Grisham book i got my hands on was 'The Broker'. It was in 2005 - I remember looking at that Red covered book lying uncared for in Atul's room. And I also remember Anerudh telling me that this book was way below Grisham's best and that he did not like it. I picked it up and read the extract part and the 'build up from the magazines' part.I was as jobless as jobless can get and so did not mind reading a book not really recommended. To my surprise by the time I was midway through the book I was in love with his style of writing. He forced me through the last hundred pages, a practice he would follow for almost every other book I read of his. And by the end of it all the irony settled on me. If THIS - supposedly "way below Grisham's best work" is THIS good, then what about the rest of it?That is how I started off on a wonderful journey. A legally thrilling ride.
Grisham's strength is plainly his knowledge of law. When you read his books you feel as though you too have been using the technical terms and the lawyer jargon for years now. The reason being He explains these terms without actually explaining them. His protagonist is never super-special. He is just another loser student at law school almost done with it, a jailed judge almost relegated to 14 more years at prison, a bored professor of law almost retired into the monotony of his life, a young recruit almost lost in the rat race of big firm lawyers. There is nothing special about them expect that they are 'almost' done till they bump into a case or an incident that is potentially the most explosive thing any American would have ever heard of. And this transition is not unnatural. It happens beautifully - Like a fluid rushing into the smaller end of a nozzle. Its so Newtonian. In their ultimate dash for survival, they are both aided and stopped by consequence. They jump past the unexpected traitor and cautiously walk into the unexpected friend, finally ending in a rare combination of supremely magical yet thoroughly believable turn of events.
Just a mention of the basic plot of some of his stories sends a thrill up the spine. Take for example 'The Last Juror' - where some many years after a jury of 13 sends an accused killer to prison for life, the members of the jury start dying one by one. Or 'The Runaway Jury' where a ferocious battle is being fought for the survival of the biggest tobacco empire and suddenly One man from inside the jury and One lady from outside of it start controlling everything the jury does. 'The Street Lawyer' where a well-off rich firm lawyer is unexpectedly held hostage and later rescued from a poor man in need of legal assistance, leaves the firm to join a low-level street law firm only to recognise that the one file he has with him from his previous firm is potentially the biggest case in the country and that he has to fight the firm he just left. 'The Brethren' where three jailed judges run a gay scandal from inside the jail and their latest target is unintentionally the next presidential candidate. (wow). 'The Partner' where a fat partner of a law firm feels cheated, fakes his death, runs away with 90 million dollars of the firms money and is finally caught and tortured after 4 years only to run away with it one more time [:)]. 'The pelican brief' where a small brief prepared as project work by a bright law school student lands her in the greatest spot of bother and gets her enemies more powerful than any one else.
All this is just a small part of it. There are more absolutely un-put-down-able classics like the Rainmaker, The Testament, The firm and a lot more. John is always at his descriptive best and he does it without boring us. One gets a super fine picture of the thrill in the waiting and then one is rushed into the climax. And the epilogue is the perfect down gearing expected.Its not just hit-hit bang-bang from the beginning. There is a very emotional build up to the events. Its as personal as writing can get. He explores relations as much and as properly as he explores law. And that is the difference between some one like Perry Mason and John Grisham's Heroes.
John, in a shocker of a decision ventured into sports fiction after he was presumably bored with crime. Out of the two books he wrote in this genre, 'Playing for Pizza' remains a delight. 'The bleachers' did not interest me as much though. Grisham has also got min- auto-biographical at times with books like 'Skipping Christmas' and 'A Painted House'. His non-fiction book 'An Innocent Man' is a great read if read in the correct spirit of mind. NINE his books have been made into successful and appreciated movies. He has also written original screenplay for a couple of films like 'Mickey' and 'The Gingerbread Man'.
Overall, John Grisham is, among many other similarly entertaining people, one of the best things to have happened in my life. To people like me who are strict practitioners of the art of time-pass, John Grisham is God and provides the very necessary moments of thrills that we yearn for. He doesn't stop with just that. He also creates a major effect on how we look at English - the language and how we use it. Here is Nishanth thanking John Grisham for all the wonderful works of his and waiting for more from him. Yours absolutely faithfully.
One time , One love !!!
-
Your Eyes are so glowing , blowing the love in me
seen you so long , never felt the love, until oh yeahhh
oh baby , you are so amazing
you bring in the best ...
13 years ago
6 comments:
nice review da :)
ane naaye... its a tribute okva? review illa :P
I went through the first 2 and a half paragraphs da, adhuku mela mudiyale :)
Blame it on the size of ur post. I always scroll down before i read anything. That explains why i havent read a novel in ages.
One thing that struck me was you are completely done in by Grisham's writing and go on about his work and yet you say that all his protagonists are almost done before that one case happens to them. All of them!!
Variety, m'friend is what Grisham needs then. :)
p1nG
dai viki nadhari... read the other paragraphs. Variety aspect is dealt with over there :P
nice review on Grisham....
Narayan
Author ( A FICTION OF LAW: A STUDY ON LEGAL THRILLERS) & legal thriller reviewer
advnarayan at yahoo dot com
nice review on Grisham....
Narayan
Author ( A FICTION OF LAW: A STUDY ON LEGAL THRILLERS) & legal thriller reviewer
advnarayan at yahoo dot com
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