Sycamore Row (The Jake Brigance)
Sycamore Row (The Jake Brigance) book cover

Sycamore Row (The Jake Brigance)

Mass Market Paperback – August 19, 2014

Price
$7.61
Publisher
Vintage
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0345543240
Dimensions
4.17 x 1.63 x 7.45 inches
Weight
12 ounces

Description

“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 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. 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. 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%
(27.7K)
★★★★
25%
(23.1K)
★★★
15%
(13.9K)
★★
7%
(6.5K)
23%
(21.3K)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

All information must be available before the trial

A very detailed and truthful description of how a conflict regarding a will/testament can take place in the USA. However, the number of surprises allowed during the trial is unreasonable, since US law dictates that all should be revealed before the trial. The other side should have time to investigate the background of information which is provided during the trial.

Thus, a number of surprises during the trial seems rather impossible, but I may be wrong in my understanding of US law.

The final trial description is a very exciting final. The period before the trial is not so exciting, but seems to show how such things happen.
7 people found this helpful
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although that is easy. Throughout the story the question arises

As one reviewer wrote, the conclusion was somewhat "expected," It still brought a tear to my eye, although that is easy. Throughout the story the question arises, "Why did he do it?" Not kill himself, but cut the kids out of his Will. And this is not answered until the very end. At first I thought we were having a re-run of Testament: rich guy pens new will, immediately kills self. Same premise, different characters. But it is well told in John's inimitable style. The lawyers are all caricatures, Varner I imagine looks like the guy in the new Little Cesar's pizza ad. Then the black guy who plays the race card, a cross between Jesse Jackson and Reverend Ike. Bottom line: Imminently entertaining, well developed, although a bit re-treaded characters, and this will certainly make a great movie.

I see Eddie Murphy or Chris Rock (in an unexpectedly dramatic turn) as the black lawyer. Both these actors could do justice to the almost militantly aggressive black defense attouney. Varner, the very Southern 'Little Ceasar's ad' guy could be anyone from John Goodman, Chevy Chase, or Larry the Cable Guy (also in an uncharacteristically dramatic roll). You get the picture. Relatives who are waiting for thier 'piece of the pie' out of the old man's Will could be anyone who is good at acting like blood-sucking leeches depicted so by Grisham. I can't wait to see it; and I hope they stick to the book this time, as they really screwed up "Runaway Jury."
5 people found this helpful
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Do lawyers have warm-blooded relatives?

Two-point-five decades after Grisham's wildly popular and enlightening [[ASIN:B00865TO4O A Time to Kill]], self-anointed Super Attorney Jake Brigance--along with popular characters from Grisham's debut novel--reappears in 1988 Mississippi to represent the $24 million estate of Seth Hubbard.

At death's door from lung cancer, septuagenarian Seth prepares a handwritten [holographic] will, leaving 90 percent of the $24 million to Lettie Lang, his black housekeeper of only three years whom he paid $5 per hour. Specifically, he contradicts a previous will that leaves everything to his two adult offspring and grandchildren. Moreover, Seth viciously prohibits his family from inheriting anything, and the remaining 10 percent of the assets are to be equally distributed to his church and younger brother Ancil, who vanished in the 1930s at age 17.

The next day, Seth attends church worship service, seems in good spirits despite approaching death, and hangs himself from a sycamore tree, an apparent suicide. On Monday morning Jake Brigance receives in the mail the holographic will, and a letter instructing Jake to prevent blood-sucking [redundant adjective] attorneys from getting a fee for contesting the will for his family. Seth--the intelligent, self-made millionaire--detests lawyers and their so-called ethics. "Ethics are determined by what they catch you doing. If you don't get caught, then you haven't violated any ethics." Do lawyers have warm-blooded relatives?

Those sharks sense blood in the water, and multimillion-dollar fees for contesting the will. Like the cockroaches they are, the score of vermin crawl out from under rocks. Even scurrilous [redundant adjective, again] attorney Booker Sistrunk from Memphis arrives in his black Rolls-Royce. The race-inciting attorney ticks off Judge Atlee, who clears his court of the worthless [redundant adjective, ad nauseam] attorneys, allowing only one firm to represent all the contestants, and of course, Jake Brigance for the estate. Each attorney brings before the judge his version of the truth. "Every trial lawyer knew there were various ways of telling the truth."

The author draws the reader into rural Mississippi during 1988, as realistically as Sue Grafton's Kinsey Millhone inhabits the late '80s. At first the characters seem cut from gossamer-thin material--especially Booker Sistrunk and Ancil Hubbard, Seth's brother. The plot, however, has more twists that a pile of rotini pasta. The shallow characters become more substantial, and pave the path to a totally unexpected dramatic climax.

Reviewed by L. Dean Murphy, a Bookreporter contributor
4 people found this helpful
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I've read so many books by John Grisham and although some are better than others

This book was highly disappointing. I've read so many books by John Grisham and although some are better than others, I always enjoy them, the characters, and the plot. This book does not have an interesting plot. First off, I recently read another Grisham book with an identical plot (fighting over a hand-written will). That book, called "The Testament", was entertaining and fulfilling for the most part. Sycamore Row never grabbed my attention and although I usually finish books in a few days, I've been working on this one for months. I'm finally almost done and can say that 3/4 of the way in, it finally got "mildly" interesting. Lettie Lang (Who I believe is supposed to be the one we root for in the book), is underdeveloped as a character and in my opinion, not at all likable. As the trial starts, I actually found myself sympathizing more with the "bad guys" (the kids of Seth Hubbard who were left nothing in the will). However, I am not really invested in the story enough to truly care. As I'm closing in toward the end, I know that the reason behind Hubbard leaving the will to Lettie, will be revealed. I'm mildly interested in finding out why...however, it will most definitely not be worth reading the first 400 pages! This is the slowest moving book I've read by choice with very little payout at the end. I am so surprised by the good reviews and by this book in general. I can't believe that Grisham used the holographic (hand-written) will plot in 2 recent novels, to begin with!
4 people found this helpful
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The second book in the Jake Brigance trio

This was an interesting sequel in the trio of the protagonist who first appeared in A Time To Kill. Struggling financially after losing his home and gaining virtually nothing from defending Carl Lee Hailey, Jake is thrust into a fight over a will.
Sounds dull but Grisham manages to make the struggle suspenseful.
A white man leaves a multi-million dollar estate to his black housekeeper and the motive is obscure. The surprise ending is pure Grisham with Mississippi’s endemic racism front and center.
If you’ve never read A Time to Kill you might want to read it first.
3 people found this helpful
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Damaged cover.

I was looking forward to receiving this book, but was very disappointed that the cover was bent so badly. I’m concerned that it’s going to rip. The rest of the book is perfect, except fir the cover.
3 people found this helpful
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Fine escape reading

John Grisham is not quite at his best with Sycamore Row, though he comes close. His colorful characters are well drawn, but they are portraits, not moving pictures. Nobody is more noble or more sinister or more mature at the end of the book than at the beginning. And speaking of characters, Grisham could have cut out a third of them with no damage to the story.

I also found the climax and denouement to be a letdown after a big buildup. I was expecting a wallop, and didn’t get it.

That said, Sycamore Row is fine escape reading with a plot that moves along at a nice clip. The book held my interest from beginning to end. In a perfect world I would have read it in one sitting.
2 people found this helpful
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Two Stars

A long book with a predictable ending.
2 people found this helpful
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Overload of unnecessey information

I have read almost all of John Grisham's books. In my opinion this book does not meet the J.G.'s writing style. The book starts out very cleae and interesting.Then between chapters 20 to 45 there is a plethora of characters who appear that confuses the core of the book. You will need a pen and writing pad so you can remember the names of all of the characters that jump into the book and mess up the beginning and ending. I honestly could not remember who was whom and what their role was. The beginning and the ending were very good and would have made an excellent novel. I still recommend the book for the beginning and the end.
1 people found this helpful
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Another fine book from John Grisham

Great book we are also treated to John Grisham as historian with his fine chapters on the Death March in the Philippines during world War Tw
1 people found this helpful