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John Grisham : The King of Torts
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Author: John Grisham
Title: The King of Torts
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Published in: English
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 376
Date: 2003-02-04
ISBN: 0712670599
Publisher: Century
Latest: 2019/08/04
Weight: 0.85 pounds
Size: 1.18 x 6.38 x 9.29 inches
Edition: 1st
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$2.14new
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Description: Product Description
376 pages. Book and Jacket appear to have hardly been read and are both in As new condition throughout. The Office Of The Public Defender Is Not Known As A Training Ground For Bright Young Litigators. Clay Carter Has Been There Too Long And, Like Most Of His Colleagues, Dreams Of A Better Job In A Real Firm. When He Reluctantly Takes The Case Of A Young Man Charged With A Random Street Killing, He Assumes It Is Just Another Of The Many Senseless Murders That Hit D.C. Every Week.


Amazon Review
John Grisham's The King of Torts demonstrates that his narrative skills remain as impeccable as ever. Grisham knows exactly what he's doing when it comes to transfixing the reader.

Within the high-powered milieu of the public defender's office in Washington DC, Grisham's protagonist is an ambitious young lawyer who finds himself saddled with what appears to be a nothing case: one of a wave of crack cocaine killings that are the bane of the capital. But as Clay Carter investigates, he finds that something more than a random street murder is involved here and a massive conspiracy becomes apparent. The stakes are suddenly very high indeed.

If the skulduggery here (involving one of the largest pharmaceutical companies in the world) is a tad familiar, Grisham remains nonpareil when it comes to delivering a smoothly engineered plot. A fresh touch is Carter's desire to break free from the routine cases he has been handling: this quickly becomes a case of beware what you wish for. Another innovative touch is the refusal to tie up the narrative in the expected ways: The King of Torts has much more verisimilitude in this area than most legal thrillers. One more thing, Grisham's prose now has a sardonic, satirical quality that suggests the Tom Wolfe of Bonfire of the Vanities. --Barry Forshaw

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