Sycamore Row: A Novel (Jake Brigance Book 2)
Sycamore Row: A Novel (Jake Brigance Book 2) book cover

Sycamore Row: A Novel (Jake Brigance Book 2)

Kindle Edition

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$9.99
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Anchor
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Praise for the novels of John Grisham "John Grisham is about as good a storyteller as we've got in the United States these days." —The New York Times Book Review "John Grisham is exceptionally good at what he does—indeed, right now in this country, nobody does it better." —Jonathan Yardley, The Washington Post "Grisham is a marvelous storyteller who works readers the way a good trial lawyer works a jury." — Philadelphia Inquirer "John Grisham owns the legal thriller." —The Denver Post "John Grisham is not just popular, he is one of the most popular novelists of our time. He is a craftsman and he writes good stories, engaging characters, and clever plots." — Seattle Times "A legal literary legend." — USA Today --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. “Powerful . . . immensely readable . . . the best of his books.” — The Washington Post “One of [Grisham’s] finest . . . Sycamore Row is a true literary event.” —The New York Times Book Review --This text refers to the mass_market edition. From the Artist John Grisham --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. John Grisham is the author of forty-seven consecutive #1 bestsellers, which have been translated into nearly fifty languages. His recent books include The Judge's List, Sooley, and his third Jake Brigance novel, A Time for Mercy, which is being developed by HBO as a limited series. xa0 Grisham is a two-time winnerxa0of the Harper Lee Prize for Legal Fiction and was honored with the Library of Congress Creative Achievement Award for Fiction. xa0 When he's not writing, Grisham serves on the board of directors of the Innocence Project and of Centurion Ministries, two national organizations dedicated to exonerating those who have been wrongfully convicted. Much of his fiction explores deep-seated problems in our criminal justice system. xa0 John lives on a farm in central Virginia. --This text refers to the mass_market edition. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 1They found Seth Hubbard in the general area where he had promised to be, though not exactly in the condition expected. He was at the end of a rope, six feet off the ground and twisting slightly in the wind. A front was moving through and Seth was soaked when they found him, not that it mattered. Someone would point out that there was no mud on his shoes and no tracks below him, so therefore he was probably hanging and dead when the rain began. Why was that important? Ultimately, it was not.The logistics of hanging oneself from a tree are not that simple. Evidently, Seth thought of everything. The rope was three-quarter-inch braided natural Manila, of some age and easily strong enough to handle Seth, who weighed 160 pounds a month earlier at the doctor's office. Later, an employee in one of Seth's factories would report that he had seen his boss cut the fifty-foot length from a spool a week before using it in such dramatic fashion. One end was tied firmly to a lower branch of the same tree and secured with a slapdash mix of knots and lashings. But, they held. The other end was looped over a higher branch, two feet in girth and exactly twenty-one feet from the ground. From there it fell about nine feet, culminating in a perfect hangman's knot, one that Seth had undoubtedly worked on for some time. The noose was straight from the textbook with thirteen coils designed to collapse the loop under pressure. A true hangman's knot snaps the neck, making death quicker and less painful, and apparently Seth had done his homework. Other than what was obvious, there was no sign of a struggle or suffering. A six-foot stepladder had been kicked aside and was lying benignly nearby. Seth had picked his tree, flung his rope, tied it off, climbed the ladder, adjusted the noose, and, when everything was just right, kicked the ladder and fell. His hands were free and dangling near his pockets.Had there been an instant of doubt, of second-guessing? When his feet left the safety of the ladder, but with his hands still free, had Seth instinctively grabbed the rope above his head and fought desperately until he surrendered? No one would ever know, but it looked doubtful. Later evidence would reveal that Seth had been a man on a mission.For the occasion, he had selected his finest suit, a thick wool blend, dark gray and usually reserved for funerals in cooler weather. He owned only three. A proper hanging has the effect of stretching the body, so Seth's trouser cuffs stopped at his ankles and his jacket stopped at his waist. His black wing tips were polished and spotless. His blue necktie was perfectly knotted. His white shirt, though, was stained with blood that had oozed from under the rope. Within hours, it would be known that Seth Hubbard had attended the 11:00 a.m. worship service at a nearby church. He had spoken to acquaintances, joked with a deacon, placed an offering in the plate, and seemed in reasonably good spirits. Most folks knew Seth was battling lung cancer, though virtually no one knew the doctors had given him a short time to live. Seth was on several prayer lists at the church. However, he carried the stigma of two divorces and would always be tainted as a true Christian. His suicide would not help matters.The tree was an ancient sycamore Seth and his family had owned for many years. The land around it was thick with hardwoods, valuable timber Seth had mortgaged repeatedly and parlayed into wealth. His father had acquired the land by dubious means back in the 1930s. Both of Seth's ex-wives had tried valiantly to take the land in the divorce wars, but he held on. They got virtually everything else.First on the scene was Calvin Boggs, a handyman and farm laborer Seth had employed for several years. Early Sunday morning, Calvin had received a call from his boss. "Meet me at the bridge at 2:00 p.m.," Seth said. He didn't explain anything and Calvin was not one to ask questions. If Mr. Hubbard said to meet him somewhere at a certain time, then he would be there. At the last minute, Calvin's ten-year-old boy begged to tag along, and, against his instincts, Calvin said yes. They followed a gravel road that zigzagged for miles through the Hubbard property. As Calvin drove, he was certainly curious about the meeting. He could not remember another occasion when he met his boss anywhere on a Sunday afternoon. He knew his boss was ill and there were rumors he was dying, but, like everything else, Mr. Hubbard kept it quiet. The bridge was nothing more than a wooden platform spanning a nameless, narrow creek choked with kudzu and crawling with cottonmouths. For months, Mr. Hubbard had been planning to replace it with a large concrete culvert, but his bad health had sidetracked him. It was near a clearing where two dilapidated shacks rotted in the brush and overgrowth and offered the only hint that there was once a small settlement there.Parked near the bridge was Mr. Hubbard's late-model Cadillac, its driver's door open, along with the trunk. Calvin rolled to a stop behind the car and stared at the open trunk and door and felt the first hint that something might be out of place. The rain was steady now and the wind had picked up, and there was no good reason for Mr. Hubbard to leave his door and trunk open. Calvin told his boy to stay in the truck, then slowly walked around the car without touching it. There was no sign of his boss. Calvin took a deep breath, wiped moisture from his face, and looked at the landscape. Beyond the clearing, maybe a hundred yards away, he saw a body hanging from a tree. He returned to his truck, again told the boy to stay inside and keep the doors locked, but it was too late. The boy was staring at the sycamore in the distance."Stay here now," Calvin said sternly. "And don't get out of the truck.""Yes sir."Calvin began walking. He took his time as his boots slipped in the mud and his mind tried to stay calm. What was the hurry? The closer he got the clearer things became. The man in the dark suit at the end of the rope was quite dead. Calvin finally recognized him, and he saw the stepladder, and he quickly put the scene and the events in order. Touching nothing, he backed away and returned to his truck. It was October of 1988, and car phones had finally arrived in rural Mississippi. At Mr. Hubbard's insistence, Calvin had one installed in his truck. He called the Ford County sheriff's office, gave a brief report, and began waiting. Warmed by the heater and soothed by Merle Haggard on the radio, Calvin gazed through the windshield, ignored the boy, tapped his fingers along with the wipers, and realized he was crying. The boy was afraid to speak. --This text refers to the mass_market edition. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • #1
  • NEW YORK TIMES
  • BESTSELLER • John Grisham returns to the iconic setting of his first novel,
  • A Time to Kill,
  • as Jake Brigance finds himself embroiled in a controversial trial that exposes a tortured history of racial tension.
  • “Welcome back, Jake. . . . [Brigance] is one of the most fully developed and engaging characters in all of Grisham’s novels.”—
  • USA Today
  • Seth Hubbard is a wealthy white man dying of lung cancer. He trusts no one. Before he hangs himself from a sycamore tree, Hubbard leaves a new, handwritten will. It is an act that drags his adult children, his black maid, and defense attorney Jake Brigance into a conflict as riveting and dramatic as the murder trial that made Brigance one of Ford County’s most notorious citizens, just three years earlier.  The second will raises many more questions than it answers. Why would Hubbard leave nearly all of his fortune to his maid? Had chemotherapy and painkillers affected his ability to think clearly? And what does it all have to do with a piece of land once known as Sycamore Row?
  • Don’t miss John Grisham’s new book,
  • THE EXCHANGE: AFTER
  • THE FIRM, coming soon!

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(27.9K)
★★★★
25%
(23.3K)
★★★
15%
(14K)
★★
7%
(6.5K)
23%
(21.4K)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Grisham is Back!!

I have always loved John Grisham's books. I can remember when I was introduced to his writing when I read A Time To Kill. I read ALL of the time - I inhale books. I have been disappointed in the last few Grisham books. In fact, I was quite irritated to read his baseball ones. I felt he had abandoned his best writing : lawyer, courtrooms, small Southern towns. Well, I just finished Sycamore Row. Oh, my! It's a wonderful book. I loved how I could not guess how the ending would be. I will have to say Grisham is back 100%. This book will shoot to the number one spot on the best sellers list!
623 people found this helpful
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THE REAL JOHN GRISHAM IS BACK

This is a real page turner. John Grisham has written some of the best fiction in the world over the years although in recent years it did seem like he was experimenting with different writing styles and looser legal research. It wasn't clear if he was losing his touch or just bored. This yarn brings back many of the characters from "A Time to Kill" set just three years later. It starts off with a last minute, hand written will arriving in the mail just days after the wealthiest man in the county takes his own life--a man that was so secretive that virtually no one knew he had any wealth at all. His family is cut out of his estate and replaced with his black maid as the beneficiary at the last minute which is where the fireworks begin. The lawyers start piling on thicker than stacks of firewood. Its impossible to figure out what is going on with all the twists and turns and the pages just keep turning. Don't start this one if you have any important appointments to keep in the morning.

Update: It might not have been clear what was meant by different writing styles and looser legal research. In a number of the author's recent books, he had written in the first person ("I looked at the judge and wondered exactly what he was thinking"), adding to that a present tense approach, which can be really hard to get into ("I am walking down the hallway and see the opening to the courtroom ahead"). This book returns to the more traditional (and I think easier to read) what is called third person, past perfect ("She looked at the painting in silence and thought to herself that no one in their right mind would hang such an abomination on a perfectly good wall. The victim, of course, hadn't moved and still stared at it with unseeing eyes."). As to looser legal research, the author, himself, mentioned that in disclaimers at the end of the last several stories, stating that he has become a lazy writer and has made up a good portion of the legal and technical facts. I tend to think he has been stretching the truth a little on this point as he has listed quite a few individuals as consultants, professional or otherwise. The characters--this is Grisham after all--are as disfunctional as ever but they come to life with his great writing such that you have to love them anyway. Most of them are like bad relatives that you wouldn't actually want to spend time with but love hearing stories about for the entertainment value.
183 people found this helpful
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Typical Grisham

I've read all Grisham's books and this comes in at the "ok" level. We'll never capture the essence of what made Grisham great in The Firm and A Time to Kill because he keeps writing along a handful of themes. 99% of lawyers are garbage. The bad guys will always uncover dirt and find a way to spring it during a trial. Mississippi is littered with towns that have railroad tracks separating white & black people. You get the point.

This book is ok, definitely worth the time and money. The ending wasn't unrealistic, though a bit predictable. The "shock" part of the ending I didn't see coming, but didn't really surprise me since it is along Grisham's common themes. Giving him a 3 is tough because it is against his best works one must compare him. The first half is pretty slow then the "action" picks up. Once I hit about 60% I couldn't put the kindle down. But like I said, it was largely predictable from that point. Still better than a lot of authors who devise something completely unrealistic so you can't guess the ending.
131 people found this helpful
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Jake is a horrible lawyer! Lazy writing to create artificial suspense. SPOILERS.

I read the whole book, because I wanted to know what happened. But I was mad the whole time. It was repetitive. The relationships between the characters were not developed AT ALL. The only real relationship shown was between Jake and Judge Atlee (which was pretty good). All of the other relationships were superficial, even his marriage. But the worst flaw is the lawyer that Grisham created.

Jake Brigance should have been fired. Are you telling me he never told Letty that she should tell him everything about her past as a housecleaner, any bad experiences she had, because they would come out in trial? When he got a list of 45 witnesses that he couldn't question at the last minute, did he show her the list and ask her if any of them could report negative info? When the first surprise witness testified, raising doubts on Letty's honesty, right before lunch, did Jake spend the lunch hour trying to find out exactly what had happened so he could handle additional surprises that might arise, or figure out a strategy for what to ask Letty about it when she took the stand again? NO, HE RUNS AWAY AND HAS LUNCH WITH HIS BUDDY, IGNORING LETTY. What a crappy lawyer.

The next worse thing was the story and the writing. Jake wins the case on a surprise witness whose testimony comes in at the last minute. WHY WAS IT LAST MINUTE? They couldn't find the brother for most of the book, then the former lawyer getting his story can't meet with him, finally he gets the testimony, but then gets drunk and is arrested on the airplane, and then loses his briefcase with the videocassette, etc. On his way back, he doesn't tell Jake what the testimony shows, he just says he needs to get there, but gets so drunk he can't. REALLY? The former lawyer doesn't disclose the content of the testimony he is trying to fly across country? He only gets completely drunk AFTER he gets testimony that will save the case? WELL, WHO WROTE THE STORY? This is an artificial trick by Grisham to make the delivery of this testimony suspenseful and dramatic, coming in at the last minute.

All the last minute testimony shows is how bad Jake was, for not finding out what the story was from Lucien as soon as he knew about it, and particularly for not looking more closely into the connection between the Rinds and Hubbards even prior to that. Not only that, but the dramatic testimony was clear a mile away-because we learn early on that white men were involved in a black man's killing, connected to the disappearance of Letty's grandfather at the same time, and it was a painful memory for the brother. We know this while they are trying to locate him, and we know from that point on he will be found just as he's needed to testify about this terrible incident. So the ending wasn't a surprise at all. I thought there would be an actual surprise. I expected that we would also find out that Seth Hubbard had fathered the baby with Lois, making him Letty's father, to explain why he bequeathed ALL of the money to Letty, but Grisham didn't go that far. His surprise was a non-surprise to us, the readers (who are the ones who need to be surprised), but a complete surprise to Jake, the lawyer (who should have been looking for this possibility as an explanation for the will once the stories started coming out).

Another big hole: If Seth hated his kids and grandkids so much, why did he leave them all the money three years prior? Why didn't he leave his money to a charity for black people instead? At that point he knew his kids didn't love him, he had memories of the lynching, he wanted to make amends. He didn't have to find Letty and hire her and wait until two days before he died to change his will. He could have made a will that made amends for his father's lynching, and then later added Letty in specifically for some share, after he had located her. He could have put her in as an administrator of a trust for all members of the Rinds family. And why did he wait until he was just weeks away from death to change the will? She lived with him for three years while he was selling everything. Didn't he know what he was planning to do with the money until the last minute? None of this makes any sense.

Another reason Jake is a bad lawyer: He wants Letty to hide her friendly relationship with Seth, in case it would be construed as a sexual relationship. And yet, before the brother turns up, he has nothing to explain why Seth would leave her the money, except he hates his kids (yet three years prior he left them everything, so he doesn't hate them that much). A friendly caretaking relationship could explain that to some degree, but Jake deliberately excluded that from the testimony. Who would leave millions to a distant, not particularly friendly, caretaker, given no other reason? One of Jake's obligations as a lawyer was to try and create a motive that would make sense to the jury, but he didn't even try.

Jake did not look into Letty's past work history, past history with employer's wills, past history with the land and the Hubbards (what about doing a DNA check to see if she was related to Seth? I would have done that, although it wouldn't have panned out). He was a lazy, sloppy lawyer, and wins the case in the end because (just in time) a brother gives Jake surprise testimony that Jake knew nothing about in advance. Prior to that he was going to lose the case because of a lack of preparation. His only angle was that Seth was a good planner. WHAT A GREAT LAWYER (NOT!). But of course, Grisham wrote him that way, so it's ultimately his fault. He did not write a legal thriller with good lawyering, which is what makes a legal thriller great.

Another thing that made me mad: Portia was in the military and traveled all around the world, but Grisham writes constantly that she is uncomfortable being invited to dinner in white people's nice houses, having dinner in nice restaurants, and surprised at being treated as an equal. REALLY? She is more sophisticated in her world experiences than Jake, has probably eaten in lots of fantastic restaurants around the world with all kinds of people of different races. You think she is awed by being treated nicely in this small rural town by white people? YOU HAVE GOT TO BE KIDDING.

So Grisham's book rests on his ability to create suspense, which he is good at, but the suspense and the relationships are all artificial.
81 people found this helpful
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Grisham's story-telling at its best. A blend of comedy, drama, suspense and gut-wrenching angst.

This is a sequel to one of Grisham's best, "A Time to Kill." Not necessarily a prerequisite - this books stands just fine on its own. picking up a few years later, lawyer Jake Brigance and his family still haven't recovered fully from the side-affects of the Hailey trial in the previous book. Once again we have a suspenseful plot with the same theme of whether racism and greed will overwhelm the outcome of a legal battle steeped in 1980's Mississippi. Grisham is definitely an expert story-teller with vivid characters and twists that keep you interested in what 'should' be a tedious and boring lawsuit over a hand-written will. A wonderful blend of comedy, tears, drama, suspense and gut-wrenching angst. Your opinion of the verdict sways back & forth but just when you think the outcome is obvious - guess again!

If you haven't read "A Time to Kill" yet (or watched the movie), you might want to read it first, because it is equally good and this book will be a bit of spoiler.
67 people found this helpful
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I HATE BOOKS LIKE THIS!!!!

Amazing story told by an amazing story teller. I was hooked after the first page. Read it night and day. Loved every second of it. Rich characters. Twists and turns. Heroes. Finished it today. NOW WHAT DO I DO? How am I gonna find another book that excites me like this one did? What do I read now that's is gonna be as entertaining? I HATE BOOKS LIKE THIS!!! LOL. All joking aside....if this book doesn't entertain you.....get a mirror under your nose.....you might be dead.
37 people found this helpful
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The Truth

John Grisham’s Book, Sycamore Row: A Novel is a must read. It touches so many old and current topics.
A good trial is when you listen to one of the lawyers and think, “Of course, there’s the truth. He’ll win.” Then you listen to the next lawyer and think exactly the same thing.
The characters are so well drawn that you feel for them all. Some you love and some you hate, but the ending will find you with tears in your eyes.
34 people found this helpful
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Oh John...

Sorry, this was so far the Grisham's poorest effort, and I have ever been his die-hard fan. Dull, boring, dragging for eternity, with a helluva legal and trial hotchpotch and tens of messy characters who grew in numbers with each new page turning... An absolute and inconsistent mess. At times I felt like I am reading one of his peculiar legal cases, or that he was just presenting some lay Mississippi court trial handbook. No action, no thrill, no suspense... I would have stopped reading after the first hundred pages, but I was still waiting and holding high hopes for the plot to FINALLY unravel. Only the book ended before that happened. Such a waste of time.... John, you should seriously consider returning to your legal practice and forget about writing any new books.
27 people found this helpful
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5 STARS +

After reading many books by self-published authors, this professionally written and edited novel was a reawakening as to why certain authors have earned the attention and respect of big name publishers. I admire the talent and intelligence of John Grisham to weave an amazing story and write a page-turner with such great ease and finesse. Well done! If you haven't read his work yet, I highly recommend that you do. Although some of his books have been made into movies, as they say, the books are always better.
22 people found this helpful
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One of the worst books I have ever read.

It was the most BORING book I have ever read. I cannot understand how this became a bestseller; i tried to read it because it is, of course, John Grisham, and I had read most of his previous books. I usually can read a book in at least two days, but I have been forcing myself to read this one for the past MONTH or so, and I actually gave up reading it because it is just, to me a wordy, non-suspenseful story that did not know how to reach the end. I didn't even bother to reach the end because, for the first time in my life, I didn't finish a book. I cannot see how this became a best seller, except for other fans like me, buying the book and thinking that since they love the author, it must be good. It was NOT good by my estimation, but judging by its best seller status, i guess I'm in the minority.
19 people found this helpful