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Painted House

tonyc October 19, 2004
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Read Time:1 Minute, 59 Second

John Grisham has made a king’s ransom with his legal thrillers, but to be honest, only

the first two were really good books. After that, all of his legal books read like they

were written in order to make movies from them. None of his latter legal books have

quite the emotion of A Time to Kill, or the raw energy of The Firm. They

all seem to have the same basic plot and formula, perfect for reading on the subway or at

the beach, but not really much of anything else.



When he steps away from

that money making format, like he did with Bleachers, he

shows the world that he is a really good writer. In A Painted House, he reaches

back into the rural Arkansas of 1952 to tell the story of a single cotton harvest and the

impact it had on the life of a seven year old boy.



The cotton is ready

to be picked when the book opens and the narrator, one Luke Chandler, is riding in the

family pick-up truck with his Pappy to find help for the harvest. The two of them are

headed into the mighty metropolis of Black Oak, Arkansas, to see if the Mexican labor

they’ve been promised has arrived yet. On the way they’ve got to try and hire some hill

people to help with the crop too. They get both, and more than they could imagine by the

time they return to the farm.



Luke’s inner voice is a bit more mature than

most seven-year-olds that I know of, but it’s a convincing one none the less. This book

is about the crop, the iterant workers who come to harvest it, a flood, a family in

transition, and a way of life that no longer exists in America. Mostly, it’s about a boy

who learns more, and is witness to more than most people, than he should be and how he

deals with those events. There are some moments in the book that are gruesome and some

that are simply good, human moments.



This book starts slow and takes its

own sweet time building any real momentum. The wait is worth it in a book that makes the

reader genuinely care about the characters and where their lives go after the cotton

harvest of 1952.

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tonyc

tonycald@gmail.com
http://www.tctheterrible.com/blog/
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