Khaleej Times

John Grisham’s 29th novel, offers mostly empty calories

- Erik Spanberg

As an author, John Grisham is a reliable bestseller. Unfortunat­ely, Grisham’s books are not always as reliable as his reputation. His 29th novel, The Whistler, for example, falls into the category of a disappoint­ment. tale of judicial corruption set in Florida, Grisham’s latest offers thrills and chases, but also feels workmanlik­e. Sure, it will still get you through a plane ride or two, but The Whistler packs a lot of empty calories.

Calories along the lines of, “As he faced the three of them, his chair suddenly felt like a hot seat,” and, “For a moment there was no air to breathe.” Characters “slug” a lot of coffee and people knock on doors at appointed hours “like clockwork.”

A character carries out surveillan­ce in this contempora­ry thriller with “his face hidden behind a newspaper,” evoking Hitchcock-era techniques in the age of Instagram.

Granted, Grisham never claimed to be a literary stylist, but his relentless plotting and narrative verve have often lifted his legal thrillers and made them memorable.

Characters such as Mitch McDeere in The Firm and Darby Shaw in The Pelican Brief, as well as small-town Mississipp­i lawyer Jake Brigance in A Time to Kill and Sycamore Row, among others, stayed with readers beyond the last page.

The Whistler centres on a straightfo­rward premise. A Florida judge is involved in a casino kickback conspiracy with a shadowy mafia kingpin.

Enter a formerly disbarred lawyer, who, in his rehabilita­ted zeal, has one unnamed client. This lawyer leads a Jimmy Buffett-style vagabond existence, floating around the Atlantic Ocean on his boat and evading his enemies.

The lawyer, through his lone client, has circumstan­tial evidence pointing to the judge’s skimming scheme. Both the lawyer and his client are eyeing the financial rewards likely to follow seizure of the judge’s illegal assets.

Suspicious of the FBI, the lawyer turns to the Board of Judicial Conduct for help. Enter plucky Lacy Stoltz, a lawyer with extensive experience investigat­ing complaints against judges.

Not for bribes and conspiraci­es but for much more mundane issues.

Stoltz and her partner, a former Florida State football player whose career ended prematurel­y because of an injury, meet the lawyer and begin pursuing a long-shot case. Lacy and her partner are handicappe­d by numerous factors, starting with their lack of criminal investigat­ion authority.

And they’re in way over their heads — facing violent mafia members without any crime-fighting skills.

While the bad guys can be cruel but cartoonish, Grisham retains his ability to conjure conspiraci­es and illustrate the depravitie­s of kickbacks and payoffs. A few near misses and a lucky break or two later, not to mention an influx of muchneeded investigat­ive expertise, the downfall of some of the worst villains scattered throughout The Whistler arrives as part of a satisfying finale.

In the novel’s latter stages, Grisham hits his stride, deploying a sniper, introducin­g remote hideaways, and staging unexpected rendezvous made at considerab­le risk.

A subplot involving the complexiti­es of native American policing and politics puts some spark in the inevitable chase to find the culprits behind a murder cover-up.

There are far worse ways to spend your time than reading a solid — if predictabl­e — Grisham thriller and, if this one doesn’t meet expectatio­ns, chances are the prolific author won’t make us wait long before he repays his vast audience with a more characteri­stic blockbuste­r tale the next time around. Here’s to hoping. — The Christian Science Monitor

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