The Associate by John Grisham

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: January 2009
  • 384pp
  • Sales Rank: 1,384
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    Reader Rating: (439 ratings)

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: January 2009
    • Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
    • Format: Hardcover, 384pp
    • Sales Rank: 1,384

    The Barnes & Noble Review

    You might think that John Grisham's 22nd book, The Associate, has little chance of being any good. According to its jacket copy, it's practically a rewrite of his 1991 blockbuster, The Firm. Time magazine cheerfully dismissed it as "John Grisham's Charming Novel About Nothing." And the book's hand-wringing about the outrageous excesses of fancy Wall Street law firms seems, in this winter of our hardship, so suddenly last summer.

    You might think all these things, but you would be wrong.

    Read the Full Review

    Synopsis

    If you thought Mitch McDeere was in trouble in The Firm, wait
    until you meet Kyle McAvoy, The Associate

    Kyle McAvoy grew up in his father’s small-town law office in York, Pennsylvania. He excelled in college, was elected editor-in-chief of The Yale Law Journal, and his future has limitless potential.

    But Kyle has a secret, a dark one, an episode from college that he has tried to forget. The secret, though, falls into the hands of the wrong people, and Kyle is forced to take a job he doesn’t want—even though it’s a job most law students can only dream about.

    Three months after leaving Yale, Kyle becomes an associate at the largest law firm in the world, where, in addition to practicing law, he is expected to lie, steal, and take part in a scheme that could send him to prison, if not get him killed.

    With an unforgettable cast of characters and villains—from Baxter Tate, a drug-addled trust fund kid and possible rapist, to Dale, a pretty but seemingly quiet former math teacher who shares Kyle’s “cubicle” at the law firm, to two of the most powerful and fiercely competitive defense contractors in the country—and featuring all the twists and turns that have made John Grisham the most popular storyteller in the world, The Associate is vintage Grisham.

    Publishers Weekly

    Bestseller Grisham's contemporary legal thriller offers an action-and-suspense plot reminiscent of that of his breakout book, 1991's The Firm, in contrast to 2008's didactic The Appeal, which served as a platform for his concerns about the corrupting effects of judicial elections. Kyle McAvoy, a callow Yale Law School student, dreams of a public service gig on graduation, until shadowy figures blackmail him with a videotape that could revive a five-year-old rape accusation. Instead of helping those in need, McAvoy accepts a position at a huge Wall Street firm, Scully & Pershing, whose clients include a military contractor enmeshed in a $800 billion lawsuit concerning a newly-designed aircraft. McAvoy can avoid exposure of his past if he feeds his new masters inside information on the case. Readers should be prepared for some predictable twists, an ending with some unwarranted ambiguity and some unconvincing details (the idea that a secret file room in a high stakes litigation case would be closed from 10:00 p.m. to 6:00 a.m. every night stretches credulity to the breaking point). Still, Grisham devotees should be satisfied, even if this is one of his lesser works.
    Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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    Biography

    The master of the legal thriller, John Grisham was a criminal and civil lawyer in Mississippi when his first book, A Time to Kill, was published. But it was his next book, The Firm, that became a blockbuster and established him as king of the genre.

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    Customer Reviews

    Good in partsby buddishh

    Reader Rating:
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    November 16, 2009: I found this gripping but the climax ... not good... as someone already mentioned we getta feel like an entire chapter towards the end is missing....

    The Associate is another "just can't put it down" Grisham successby BoodleMama

    Reader Rating:
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    November 15, 2009: True to the Grisham formula, this is a fast-paced novel about a newly graduated law student who become tangled in his lawfirm's web of white collar crimes. His career is seemingly doomed before he can make a name for himself...but then again, he can fall back on his wits, secret spy novels and his father for support.

    Has a sense of de-ja-vu, to "The Firm"; however, I still could not put it down and read it in a day.

    While I loved the depth of the characters, the intertwining of the sub-plot left me slightly disappointed on that matter only. Otherwise, another winner!

    I Also Recommend: A Painted House.


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