Always the Truth
One to pass by I will say that I am a John Grisham fan and have read all of his books but one, and it also was not a legal thriller. This one wasn't even in the same ballpark as his other non- legal thrillers. Some of the more recent legal books haven't been as good as his earlier works, but still far better than Camino Island. In this case, it seemed like a completely different author wrote this book. It had none of his usual suspense, and too many characters who really had nothing to do with or for the story. The ending was terrible and completely disjointed, and based on what happens in the book with the female lead, not even believable that she would end up where she did, or get the visit that she did. This book was almost like Mr. Grisham either got bored with his legal thrillers, or just had a deadline he had to meet. I would hope he isn't thinking of branching off into this type of genre, he should stick to what he does best, or just take a break for a bit instead of cranking out a book like this which again seems like it shouldn't even bear his name. In the meantime, I would suggest that fans just let this one pass by, and as always that us is the truth.
14 people found this review helpful
Julie B.
Ugh. The intrigue parts of this book were classic Grisham, but the rest of it - the weird non-romance and writing from the woman's point of view was wooden and awful. I felt like this book was written by 2 different writers. Give me a Rogue Lawyer sequel any day over this.
59 people found this review helpful
Steven Contois
One of worst Grisham books I have read in last 10 years. He goes on and on about literary history and lives of writers at the expense of the central plot. I struggled to finish this book and I am hugely dissapointed.
2 people found this review helpful