Widows of Malabar Hill

The Widows of Malabar Hill (A Perveen Mistry Novel Book 1) by [Massey, Sujata]A very engaging tale of a newly-minted attorney in 1920s Bombay (now Mumbai). Purveen Mistry is Bombay’s first and only female attorney, which presents several professional drawbacks, but it has one huge advantage: access to the class of women, often very wealthy, who are walled off from outside society in a harem and allow no contact with any males except their husband. This book is the story of a will-and-trust situation (a complex one, given the three surviving wives) that turns into a murder investigation, for which our heroine is quite unprepared. It also provides interesting insights into the interplay between India’s superficially-tolerant religious factions and the social issues (but also some of the equalizing and stabilizing influences) resulting from the British occupation which had then been going on for over 150 years. The events of the book also provide an introduction to some aspects of the Parsee religion (Zoroastrianism) imported from Persia in the middle ages, although mostly the book addresses only a few of the more dramatic practices rather than a fuller exposition of that very interesting religion.  This was read as an audio book, the quality of which was excellent, using several audio voices and tonalities to keep the characters distinct.

Link to the book on Amazon

The Reckoning, Camino Beach and the Rooster Bar

John Grisham’s three latest offerings are sure to excite his readership in several ways at the same time.  The reviews are already in and heavily bi-modal; people like them or they don’t, and then they reverse positions on the other book/s. The reason is that the three are incompletely different voices; the good news is that you are certain to like at least one of them, and will probably not like one of them. Which is which will depend largely on you!

The Reckoning is the sort of book that Mr. Grisham wants to write. It is in the same vein as “A Time to Kill”, which was his first work and that usually indicates it’s the one he really had to write. It also went nowhere until he broke out with The Firm. The Reckoning starts out a bit weird in that the protagonist goes out and commits a very violent act pretty much in plain sight, so it seems improbable that the lawyers can get their man off – and apparently, that’s fine with him. In fact, although lawyers are necessarily involved in this type of event, they aren’t the centerpiece that one expects of a writer of legal thrillers, and the story wouldn’t change much if no mention were made of the lawyers at all. It’s a serious work, seeking perhaps to move into the “literature” category, addressing a couple of Grisham’s topics of interest (veterans’ issues and Old South racial tensions). It is not uplifting in any way. But it will probably keep you reading to find out why the protagonist did what he did.

The Rooster Bar goes in the other direction. It is indeed a lawyer story, again taking on social issues, in this case the student loan industry, private (commercial) law schools, and the effect of immigration laws on those who have decided to evade them. The base story is that four friends realize that their huge investment in law school are not likely to result in high-paying jobs immediately upon graduation. So they decide to quit law school and impersonate lawyers so they can sue the school and the industry. As many commenters have noted, this is a pretty idiotic premise, because 90 percent of the group’s problems would have been resolved had they simply completed their last semester and buckled down to pass the bar exam. For long-time Grisham readers, the more off-putting aspect of the book is the obvious catering to the stereotype of the millennial class, from the story-line to the dialog. But he’s in the commercial end of the business, and you can’t keep selling books to baby boomers much longer, so I can’t fault it as a marketing strategy; I’m just going to have to shift from automatic purchase into checking out the reviews before buying the next book.

Camino Island returns to the mainstream work that brought him fame and fortune. It too is not a lawyer story at all, in fact none of the major players is a lawyer. Its pacing and content places it squarely in the conventional thriller genre, and among his prior works it probably comes closest in flavor to the Pelican Brief. The situations are subtle, the locales are well-described, and the dialog is crisp. This one should find favor with fans of all types, even if no lawyers do come to grief.

Just Punishment

OK, maybe David and his delightful family and staff laid a promising framework with the great accommodations and fabulous food at their Charleston Inn in Hendersonville NC. But books are a serious thing and he doesn’t know I bought a copy (until now). I was planning to take it home and give it a try but I soon found myself sneaking in a chapter here and there as our companions’ rest schedule permitted, and a satisfying finish was reached before the trip ended. The author strives somewhat for the John Grisham style, although he comes at it from the opposite end of the spectrum, and there is a bit of the first-novel tendency to use the dialog to preach instead of letting the action reveal the intended message (which in this case it would have done anyway – I knew where the story was going long before the speeches came in).  This applies also to the key relationship which simply happens, so fast as to be jarringly improbable.  Those minor carps aside, as I said from the start, once you get into it you will have a hard time putting it down, and that is criterion number one for a thriller-type book.

Payne, David R., “Just Punishment“, Page Publishing, 2016.