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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
25 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great book!,
By A Customer
This review is from: A Painted House (Hardcover)
Having read quite a few of John Grisham's books in the past I was beginning to find the whole lawyer thing quite tired and boring. When I purchased "A Painted House" I thought I'd give him one more go and then give him up for a lost cause. However I was pleasantly surprised to find that I could not find a lawyer anywhere in in sight! The book is written with tenderness and insight into the hardships of the lives of cotton farmers many years ago. Although it would not fall into the category of your usual "gripping" novel, I just couldn't put this book down and finished it in a weekend. I would imagine that if someone still enjoyed John Grisham's usual style they would be bitterly dissapointed with this book but if you feel the need for something different and more mellow, this book is definitely for you.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Nostalgic Charmer..,
By A Customer
This review is from: A Painted House (Hardcover)
If you are looking for a legal battle with judges' witnesses and juries forget it.A clear departures from John Grisham's Court Room /Lawyer Thrillers, A Painted House is a gem of a read. And in my opinion undeniably one of his best! But then I think that of all Grisham Books. The hero, Luke Chandler is only seven years old, but can he tell a story. . Snippets of his life during the cotton-picking season in the early fifties in Arkansas are not soon forgotten. Luke introduces us to the field hands who arrive to help pick the cotton that is waist high. 'The Mexicans' and 'The Hill Folk', bring a lot of tension, (not to mention a murder) to this hard working family of Farmers. The fact that the Chandlers' are avid Cardinal Baseball fans just adds enjoyment to this delightful nostalgic story of a bygone era. A Painted House is simply one of the most dead on target depictions of Southern rural life in the fifties, poignant sensitive and thought provoking. It brought back fond memories of a simpler life style. One we would have a hard time returning after a taste of the highly sophisticated electronic equipment we now have now found necessary. If you want to escape and enjoy a good read, take my advice and read this with the thought in mind that this is how life used to be for many Americans. Not bad, not bad at all.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Seriously Goord Read.,
By apbmach2@aol.com (London) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Painted House (Hardcover)
This book marks something of a departure for John Grisham. All of his previous books have dealt in some way with the law. "A Painted House", does not, but tells the tale of a 7 year old boy growing up in rural Arkansas in the early 1950's. It is, as the blurb in the front cover explains, in many ways autobiographical, reflecting Grisham's own childhood.At first I was unsure if I was going to enjoy this book, I feared that a story about a young boy growing up on a farm during the cotton-picking season might bore me. I needn't have worried. Although this story differs from the author's previous novels, and the pace is slower, it is none the less an amazing read. With a murderous fight, a 17 year old girl running away with a knife wielding Mexican and an illegitimate child chucked in for good measure, this book is far from boring. Add in the claustrophobic atmosphere of a small town, where every body knows every body else's business and the interminable tension of a family under strain to harvest their crop before the weather breaks; and what you get is a real page turner. What is most interesting about this book though, is that it tells the tale of a boy growing up. Whilst not exactly chronicling his journey from boyhood to manhood, it shows us how he becomes more self-aware. Aware of the world outside, his small town, of the change in technology as the TV and phone become more commonplace and begin to intrude even into little towns like Black Oak. In this way, it seems to me, that the book is also a microcosm, reflecting how American and indeed the Western world changed as the consumer society took over from the bleak war years and the fading ripples of the Great Depression. This book is seriously good. If you liked John Grisham's books before or even if you've never read one, read this, you will not be disappointed.
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