Ford County by John Grisham
- Book Review By Erin Collazo Miller
The Bottom Line
Ford County is John Grisham's first collection of short stories.
Grisham returns to Ford County, Mississippi, the setting of A Time to
Kill, and brings readers seven stories of life in this small, Southern
setting. Grisham has previously tried to branch out from legal thrillers with
books like Bleachers and Playing for Pizza. Ford County is
a better read than either of those, combining his skill at writing page turners
with his observant eye for small town life and moral ambiguity.
Pros
- The stories are easy to get into, lessening the
start up costs of having to learn new characters.
- Grisham covers a variety of topics, but they are
all well written & engaging.
- Grisham gives us a taste of the legal thrillers
he's known for in some of the stories.
Cons
- Outcomes are not always realistic.
Description
- 'Ford County' by John Grisham was published in
November 2009.
- Publisher: Doubleday
- 320 Pages
Guide Review - 'Ford County' by John Grisham - Book
Review
I'm always a little bit hesitant
about collections of short stories. I wonder if there will be enough meat to
justify having to learn new characters and situations every 50 pages or so.
Starting a new book is always a little risky, and I wonder if I will have to
endure those same start up costs seven times in one collection.
Fortunately,
Grisham makes reading easy. His books are popular because they are immediately
entertaining, but don't shy away from moral dilemmas and complex characters.
Each story in Ford County was easy to enter and satisfying throughout in
its own way. In fact, I appreciated being able to start and finish a whole
story in one evening, giving me the freedom to take the book at my own pace
without losing track of important plot threads.
If you
want to get a feel for Ford County, Grisham has made one of the stories,
“Fetching Raymond,” available for free
on his Web site. "Fetching Raymond" shows how Grisham's ability to
tell a bigger story through one snapshot of some characters' lives.
Some of
the other stories I particularly enjoyed were "Michael's Room" and
"Quiet Haven." "Michael's Room" feels like one of Grisham's
legal thrillers, and by the end makes readers question what justice would
actually look like. "Quiet Haven" also blurs the lines between good
and evil -- is a con man who brings to light horrible conditions in a nursing
home better or worse than the people who don't profit but perpetuate a system
that ignores the needs of those who can't speak for themselves?
Overall,
I recommend Ford County. It is a must read for Grisham fans, and would
be satisfying for anyone who wants beach or airport reading that is substantial
without being too heavy.
http://bestsellers.about.com/od/shortstorycollections/gr/ford_county.htm
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