1.) The Racketeer - Malcolm Bannister is a black 43 year old disbarred
lawyer from Virginia serving a 10
year sentence for a breach of the RICO statutes;
2.) The Litigators – In David Zinc there is a denizen of a legal
factory, this time in Chicago . He
escapes the giant firm for a place in the office of street front lawyers, Oscar Finley and Wally Figg,
scrambling to make a living who make a bad decision to venture into high stakes
mass torts;
3.) The Associate – Kyle McAvoy is a young lawyer employed in one of New
York City ’s giant legal factories where he grinds away
for the partners;
4.) The Confession – Robbie Flak is a flamboyant Texas
defence counsel trying to save a young black man from execution;
5.) The Appeal - Wes and
Mary Grace Payton are hard working trial lawyers who win a major jury
verdict. The losers set out to control the appellate court which will hear the
appeal by nominating and supporting a conservative lawyer, Ron Fisk, to win the
election, formerly non-partisan, to the appellate court.
6.) The Broker – Joel Backman, a Washington
power broker, sent to jail who is unexpectedly pardoned and sent out of the U.S. ;
7.) The Last Juror – Lucien Wilbanks and Harry Rex Vonner are rural Mississippi
lawyers though the main character is newspaper owner, Willie Traynor;
8.) The King of Torts – Clay Carter is a Washington
D.C. legal aid lawyer who stumbles into
mass tort litigation;
9.) The Summons – University
of Virginia law professor, Ray
Atlee, returns home to rural Clanton , Mississippi
where he deals with unexpected issues after the sudden death of his father, Judge Reuben V. Atlee;
10.) The Brethern – A trio
of former judges, now in a Federal prison, plot scams from prison;
11.) The Testament – Nate O’Riley is a major litigation lawyer and
recovering alcoholic searching for the heiress to a vast fortune and defending
her father’s will;
12.) The Street Lawyer – Michael Brock is a Washington
D.C. anti-trust lawyer in a big firm who
joins a legal aid clinic to work for the homeless;
13.) The Partner – Patrick Lanigan is a junior partner in a Biloxi ,
Mississippi law firm aiding a client to
defraud the federal government;
14.) The Runaway Jury - Wendall
Rohr is the lawyer for the plaintiff in a major tobacco action in Biloxi , Mississippi while Durwood Cable acts for the defence.
Rankin Fitch is the master manipulator and Nicholas Easter leads the runaway
jury;
15.) The Rainmaker – Rudy Baylor
is a new law school graduate who unexpectedly finds himself practising in
Memphis with ambulance chaser, Bruiser Stone, and undertakes a major insurance
bad faith case;
16.) The Chamber – Adam Hall is dispatched from a major Chicago
law firm to act pro bono to try to
save the life of Sam Cayhall. Hall is Cayhall’s grandson;
17.) The Client – Reggie Love is a former alcoholic in her own small
practice in Memphis , Tennessee ;
18.) The Pelican Brief – Darby Shaw is a Tulane
University law student;
19.) The Firm – Mitchell Y. (Mitch) McGeer is a young Harvard law
graduate lured to a Memphis law firm specializing in tax law;
20.) A Time to Kill – In the first legal mystery Jake Brigance is a
white lawyer in the small town of Clanton
in Ford County
in Mississippi called to defend a
black friend charged with murder.
I have read all 20 over the past 24 years, most before I
started this blog. I have enjoyed Grisham's lawyers and will discuss them in my
next post.
Bill, I liked the way you featured some of Grisham's main lawyers in this post. Now I haven't ready every book by Grisham but I don't think he has repeated any of his fictional lawyers in his novels. Perhaps, he didn't want to stereotype his lead character lest it seem like a series. As a lawyer yourself, how close would you say his fictional lawyers are to those in real courtrooms or outside of it? Many thanks, Bill.
ReplyDeleteBill - It is interesting isn't it how many different kinds of lawyers Grisham has featured. They're all different and Grisham has given each of them a distinctive personality. To me, he'd put a real human face on the legal system and I like that.
ReplyDeletePrashant: Thanks for an interesting comment. Of Grisham's lawyers I find those lawyers who go to court "real". For those involved in lobbying and advocacy I am not as sure. I can see his trial lawyers in "real" courts.
ReplyDeleteMargot: Thanks for the comment. I think Grisham has done more than any other writer of legal mysteries to show the breadth of the legal community.
ReplyDelete