USA TODAY US Edition

John Grisham concedes he ‘stole’ his latest story

- Jerry Mitchell

John Grisham “stole” a story for his latest novel.

He admits to the literary larceny, saying it’s a story he heard three decades ago as a Mississipp­i lawmaker. “There were some big-time storytelle­rs there,” he said.

His new novel, “The Reckoning,” opens – just as the story he heard – with a prominent man fatally shooting another prominent man three times, driving home and waiting for the sheriff to arrest him. When the sheriff arrives, the man said, “I have nothing to say.”

For Grisham, “The Reckoning” varies from the 39 other books he has written.

“I have a lot of loyal fans. They want to be entertaine­d with a fast read,” he said. “This is very different. That’s been the reaction.”

Unlike his previous books, this one takes place in a time before he was born.

“It’s not necessaril­y a legal thriller,” he said. “Then it takes a hard left turn and goes to war. No one expects that from me.”

He read about a dozen books on the Bataan Death March, he said. “It’s hard to believe the human spirit could survive something like that.”

Thousands of the more than 60,000 prisoners of war didn’t survive the three-month march across the Philippine­s during World War II. An Allied military commission later concluded that many of these POWs had been subjected to horrible abuse and killed.

Richard Howorth, owner of Square Books in Oxford, which hosted Grisham’s first bookstore signing, praised the meticulous research.

“John Grisham delivers his reliable thriller dope and a tense legal trial, but here laced with some provocativ­e underpinni­ngs of serious philosophy of the value of one human’s life, and the relative difference, if any, between honor in war and honor at home,” he said.

John Evans, owner of Lemuria Bookstore in Jackson, believes that Grisham’s latest novel is a breakthrou­gh. “It’s his most literary work since ‘A Time to Kill,’ ” Grisham’s first novel, he said.

Grisham said the idea of being literary never crosses his mind.

“I don’t think in those terms,” he said. “When I start a new book, my goal is to write the best book ever and to deliver a story that will capture the attention of readers for a few days and give them something to think about.”

Evans called “The Reckoning” a “humdinger. If people didn’t know it was a Grisham book, they would think this was a hot new writer.”

After her success with the Harry Potter series, author J.K. Rowling wrote novels under the pseudonym Robert Galbraith. Stephen King wrote books under the name Richard Bachman.

Grisham said he has never considered writing under a pseudonym.

“I’m not sure what the purpose is,” Grisham said, noting that he has still been able to write other books, including nonfiction and one on baseball.

So far, reviews for his new novel are mixed. For Grisham, “life is too short to fret over bad reviews. I’m almost to the point where they leave me alone.”

“The Reckoning” shares an ending with the story he heard at the Capitol, where he was a lawmaker from 1983 to 1990.

He never wrote it down, but he never forgot the tale.

“If anybody knows whether it is true,” Grisham said, “I would love to hear about it.”

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