The Litigators by John
Grisham, (New York: Dell / Random House; 2011), 488 pages.
In The Litigators, John Grisham gives the reader another story based
around a lawyer dissatisfied with the practice of law. In this book, the
central character is a young Harvard graduate practicing law in a large Chicago
law firm in the relatively obscure field of bond underwriting. He earns a very high
income, works very long hours, hardly ever sees his wife, and is miserable. One
day he decides to go to a bar instead of work, gets drunk, and ends up at the
end of the day at the office of two sleazy ambulance chasing lawyers. He
decides to work for them on commission, just as they start a questionable and
ill-founded class action against a pharmaceutical company. Both the sleazy
lawyers and the young hot-shot are pleased: the sleazy lawyers get someone to
run their litigation, and the young hot-shot learns how to run a real case
through the courts. While the class action case slowly falls apart, the young
hot-shot learn how to make a case, how the civil courts operate, and the sleazy
side of certain mass tort cases. All these skills are put to use in a case he
runs concurrently, a product liability case on behalf of a young child that was
seriously injured though led poisoning from a toy. Through litigating an
unfounded founded class action against a pharmaceutical company, our young
lawyer learns the nobility and satisfaction that comes from fight for justice
on behalf of the injured. By the end of the book, our young lawyer redeems
himself, puts his family life on the right track, and sets things right with
the two sleazy ambulance chasers that took him in.
Readers interested in a fast paced
and exciting legal drama will not be disappointed by The Litigators. This book fits into John Grisham’s general model
for a legal thriller in that the young lawyers who discovers that the legal
profession can be both deadly dull and sleazy, can redeem himself and so something
good an honorable in that profession, in an Atticus Finch kind of way. I’m not
aware of any serious errors or gaps in this book. There may be some technical errors
known only to legal experts that work in the civil courts of Chicago, but only
they would notice them if they were there. If there is a weakness, or element
of implausibility, it’s the way our young hot-shot chose to make his career
change. Is it plausible that a young Harvard hot-shot would leave his
six-figure job in a big city law firm without any pre-planning, and after
spending the day in a bar, go and work for a couple of sleazy ambulance
chasers? Likely or not, it doesn’t matter. This is fiction, and in this book, the
story works. It is because the young hot-shot makes such a dramatic and
unexpected change that his redemption is so satisfying. Perhaps through the hot
shot lawyer, Grisham has a message for us all: no matter how much you dislike
your job, you have certain skills that can be put to use in an honorable and
satisfying way that can benefit society. All you have to do is make a change
and work really hard.
This book is worth reading. It’s
a fast paced story that manages to entertain as well as provide an example for
those that want to change their life. Go read it.
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