The Rooster Bar by John Grisham was a disappointment for this reader, who has been a long-time Grisham fan. A Time to Kill is one of my favorite novels, as is The Firm, A Painted House, Playing for Pizza, and The Testament. I enjoy his characterizations of a variety of types of people, and that may be where this novel falls down. This tale of three law school students who have been sold a bill of goods by a for-profit law school left me disinterested in what was going to happen as a result of their friend’s suicide and their increasing concern about their college debt. I kept waiting for these three young people to make an effort to get the for-profit model changed so others wouldn’t end up in their predicament. However, they are more motivated by escaping the burden of the enormous debt that awaits them in a semester when they graduate from law school.
Sam Graham-Felsen’s first novel Green, is set in 1992 in Boston. The protagonist and narrator, whose name is David Greenfield, is a middle school student who loves the Celtics and Larry Bird. David’s parents have decided they will live in an area of high poverty and send David to a public school where he is one of a handful of white students. Complicating his life is the fact that he has to take a high stakes test to get into Latin, the public high school that may lead him on to Harvard University, his parents’ alma mater. Gradually, David comes into his own, helped by a new friend who educates him on what it means for someone to be poor, smart, and African-American. This novel, in spite of the fact that it has a young narrator, is not a YA book; it is an Alex Award winner, a book intended for adults but good for young adults. I was caught up in David’s story and his struggles to understand himself, his family, his school, and his community. Graham-Felsen captures the confusion of adolescence and middle school and brings his reader, even one as old as I am, along for the ride.
My favorite of this trio of novels is Michael Connelly’s The Wrong Side of Goodbye: A Bosch Novel. Hieronymous Bosch has become a star of the detective/murder mystery genre with not only novels but also a five-season series on Amazon Prime. Connelly has incorporated not just one but two plots in this 2016 addition to the Bosch novels. Harry (Hieronymous) Bosch as retired and is doing some volunteer work for the San Fernando Police Department, looking at some crimes that have remained unsolved. One of the most pressing is that of a rapist who has a very specific modus operandi, one that indicates he knows a great deal about his victims and their homes. However, the rapist’s DNA is not in the records, and he wears a mask, making identification very difficult. While Harry is focused on that case, he, in his role as PI, also gets a call to visit an extraordinarily wealthy old man who, before he dies, wants to know whether he has any living heirs. The old man knows his son was killed in Vietnam, but he has a nagging feeling that there may be a descendant out there somewhere. So, Harry gets to work, using the computer resources at the police department, which is grounds for dismissal. Before Harry can tell his client his discoveries, the old man is found dead at his desk. Cue the mystery music. Very quickly, Harry and his SFPD partner are deep into the serial rapist investigation when another woman is attacked, although she is able to chase the rapist away before she is harmed. Both plots become more complicated, requiring lots of quick thinking and deduction from Harry. Needless to say, Harry solves both the client’s and the SFPD’s cases. Connelly writing style kept me engaged all the way through, with some humor, some good foreshadowing, and some exciting plot turns. I am going to be checking out the Amazon Prime series soon.