Well,
it has been quite awhile, but Larry W. Chavis is finally back on the blog today
with another review. After you read the below regarding the new one by John
Grisham, make sure you go check out his review of the 2016 Bouchercon Anthology,
Blood
on the Bayou. I keep telling Larry he is good at this reviewing thing
and ought to keep at it. I hope he does.
"I
Have Nothing to Say.'
The Reckoning by
John Grisham
New York, Doubleday
October 23, 2018
ISBN: 978-0-385-54415-3 (hardcover)
978-0-385-54416-0 (ebook)
Reviewed by Larry W. Chavis
At the end of 1945, Pete Banning
returned home to the fictional town of Clanton, Mississippi, a bona fide war
hero. Captured by the Japanese forces who had forced the American and Filipino
defenders, starving and with no hope of reinforcement, to surrender, Pete
survived the horrors of the Bataan Death March, and the even-more-unspeakable nightmares
of prison camp, to escape and fight for three years as a guerilla in the
mountains of Luzon. His family, notified after the fall of the Philippines of
his missing-and-presumed-dead status, ecstatically welcomed him home to his
ancestral farmlands. A happy ending for everyone.
Until the chilly morning of October 9,
1946, when Pete Banning rose early, walked to his sister's neighboring acreage
to have breakfast with her, then calmly drove into Clanton, strode into the Methodist
preacher's office, that of his friend, the Reverend Dexter Bell, and shot him
three times, twice in the chest and once in the head. Exiting the pastor's
study, Banning told the church caretaker to fetch the sheriff, and then drove
home to await his arrest. To the sheriff, to his attorney, to his family,
Banning made one statement: "I have nothing to say."
The first chapter of John Grisham's
latest book sets the stage for what may be his most perplexing novel yet. Not
that the underlying motive is so perplexing—in fact, when it is revealed in the
final pages, it may be a bit of a let-down—but that Pete Banning is not only
willing to commit murder and set loose an avalanche of uncertain and possibly
dire consequences on his family, the victim's family, his farm hands and their
families, even all of Ford County, without uttering so much as a syllable of
the reason for it. Pete's obstinate refusal to speak could, perhaps, be viewed
as the actions of principled character acting on his principles. It could also
be taken as the narcissistic action of a man who will unleash, at the very least,
waves of anxiety and fear on those closest to him with never a care for what he
is doing to them. The reader is left to determine which, and it is not so easy
to do.
Being a John Grisham book, race and the
legal system play prominent roles, the legal system's corruptible and very
flawed processes on display, the racial inequities present in 1946 Mississippi
differing in degree, if not so much in kind, from those that still plague
society. There are two trials in the book, criminal and civil, written with
Grisham's ability to highlight a system that, like Diogenes, seeks for truth
and honesty. One is left to wonder whether and how often these things are
found. The Reckoning is worth reading and is a book to make one think.
It is not a book to make one happy.
Larry W. Chavis ©2018
3 comments:
Grisham is an interesting writer. I haven't read this latest novel yet and so I was interested in reading your incisive review.
I have been aware of this book but not the story line. Larry, you have convinced me to read it. Off to the library this afternoon. I will get this on my reserved list pronto. Thank you. Terrie
I am thinking about doing that library hold list deal too becuase of Larrry.
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