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Mississippi Books and WritersFebruary 2004 Add a title to this page
Note: Prices listed below reflect the publisher's suggested list price. They are subject to change without notice.
By John Grisham Doubleday (Hardcover, $27.95, ISBN: 0385510438) Publication date: February 2004 Description from Publishers Weekly: Grisham has spent the last few years stretching his creative muscles through a number of genres: his usual legal thrillers (The Summons, The King of Torts, etc.), a literary novel (The Painted House), a Christmas book (Skipping Christmas) and a high school football elegy (Bleachers). This experimentation seems to have imbued his writing with a new strength, giving exuberant life to this compassionate, compulsively readable story of a young mans growth from callowness to something approaching wisdom. Willie Traynor, 23 and a college dropout, is working as a reporter on a small-town newspaper, the Ford County Times, in Clanton, Miss. When the paper goes bankrupt, Willie turns to his wealthy grandmother, who loans him $50,000 to buy it. Backed by a stalwart staff, Willie labors to bring the newspaper back to health. A month after his first issue, he gets the story of a lifetime, the murder of beautiful young widow Rhoda Kasselaw. After being raped and knifed, the nude Rhoda staggered next door and whispered to her neighbor as she was dying, “Danny Padgitt. It was Danny Padgitt.” The killer belongs to an infamous clan of crooked highway contractors, killers and drug smugglers who live on impregnable Padgitt Island. Willie splashes the murder all over the Times, making him both an instant success and a marked man. The town is up in arms, demanding Dannys head. After a near miss (the Padgitts are known for buying themselves out of trouble), Danny is convicted and sentenced to life in prison. As hes dragged out of the courtroom, he vows revenge on the jurors. Willie finds, to his consternation, that in Mississippi life doesnt necessarily mean life, so in nine years Danny is back out — and jurors begin to die. Around and through this
plot Grisham tells the sad, heroic, moving stories of the eccentric inhabitants
of Clanton, a small town balanced between the pleasures and perils of the
old and the new South. The novel is heartfelt, wise, suspenseful and funny,
one
of the best Grishams ever. By Nevada Barr Putnam (Hardcover, $24.95, ISBN: 0399151443) Publication date: February 2004 Description from Publishers Weekly : The serene snow country suddenly turns deadly
for Anna Pigeon in Barrs riveting 12th novel to feature the intrepid
National Park Service ranger (after 2003s Flashback). On assignment
to locate four
young park employees who went missing in a fierce storm, the 50ish Anna is
working undercover as a waitress at Yosemites Ahwahnee Hotel, where she
must deal not only with an exacting supervisor and a surly head chef but also
share
a dorm with 20-something roommates. Evoking the stunning beauty of the park
in winter, Barr contrasts the relative safety of Yosemite Valley with the surrounding
Sierra Nevada mountains into which Anna treks in search of the missing kids.
Danger crackles like ice on the frozen lake where she finds a partially submerged
plane loaded with drugs. Attacked by vicious poachers, Anna flees into the
absolute, terrifying darkness for an ordeal that will keep readers eagerly
turning the pages. So well done is this nail-biting sequence that the resolution
can come only as something of a letdown. Barr has a true gift for outdoor writing,
using the lush snow as natural cover for the violent life in the wild as well
as among the parks human custodians. Anyone contemplating a nice winter hike
will think twice after entering the wilderness with Anna, but her fans always
come back for more. By Nevada Barr Berkley (Paperback, $7.99, ISBN: 0425194493) Publication date: February 2004 Description from Publishers Weekly : When it comes to a vibrant sense of place, Barr
has few equals, as deliciously demonstrated in her 11th Anna Pigeon novel (after
2002s Hunting Season), set in little-known Dry Tortugas National
Park, 70 miles off Key West in the Gulf of Mexico. Anna takes up her new post
on Garden Key, home to Fort Jefferson, a notorious Union prison during the
Civil War, after fleeing a marriage proposal from just-divorced Sheriff Paul
Davidson. As she goes about her duties, Anna quickly becomes ensnared in one
life-threatening situation after another. Annas fans expect no less;
all her postings somehow turn dangerous. Indeed, the contrast between the natural
beauty of the landscapes and the human evils within them is a recurring theme.
But this one has an added twist: a mystery concerning alleged Lincoln assassination
conspirator Dr. Samuel Mudd interweaves with current crimes. In a coincidence
best left unscrutinized, Annas great-great-great-aunt was the wife of
the forts commanding officer, and her letters, relating a story of intrigue
and murder, have surfaced. The two stories are told in alternating chapters,
and only Barrs skill keeps this familiar device fresh. The pitch-perfect
19th-century phrasing in the letters makes it easy to forgive the occasional
over-the-top prose in the modern scenes. But this is a quibble. Those who already
admire the doughty National Park ranger will rejoice in this double-layered
story with its remarkable setting, passionately rendered; new readers have
a treat in store.
Mississippi Writers
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