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Book Review: John Grisham brings back 'The Firm' star Mitch McDeere in 'The Exchange'

Thirty-two years after 鈥淭he Firm鈥 launched his career as a legal novelist who churns out bestselling books that almost invariably become movies, John Grisham returns with a sequel starring Mitch McDeere.
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This cover image released by Doubleday shows "The Exchange" by John Grisham. (Doubleday via AP)

Thirty-two years after 鈥淭he Firm鈥 launched his career as a legal novelist who churns out bestselling books that almost invariably become movies, returns with a sequel starring Mitch McDeere.

In 鈥淭he Exchange,鈥 it鈥檚 2000 and McDeere is now a high-powered partner at the world鈥檚 largest law firm, Scully & Pershing, having 鈥渆stablished a reputation as a sort of legal SWAT team leader sent in by Scully to rescue clients in distress.鈥 He lives a very privileged life in Manhattan with his wife and two young boys.

Grisham fans will love the first 37 pages, as McDeere travels back to Memphis for the first time since the events in 鈥淭he Firm鈥 and meets with an old friend. It鈥檚 an excuse for Grisham to fill in the 15-year time gap since Mitch and his wife Abby fled Memphis on the run from the Chicago mob, who was hunting him for his role exposing crimes at Bendini, Lambert & Locke, but it鈥檚 inconsequential to the new story Grisham has to tell.

That narrative kicks off when Mitch is called to Rome to take the lead on a case involving a Turkish company that built a $400 million bridge to nowhere in the Libyan desert that (yes, it鈥檚 the year 2000 and the Libyan dictator is still alive) is now refusing to pay for. When Mitch assigns a London-based Scully associate to go on a fact-finding mission to the bridge, she is taken hostage and this legal thriller pretty much drops the adjective and just becomes a thriller.

Mitch鈥檚 job is not to legally outsmart his colleague鈥檚 captors, but to try and make sure she鈥檚 not beheaded by terrorists by working every angle to come up with their ransom. The action skips from New York to Rome to London to Tripoli to Istanbul and it鈥檚 very easy to imagine the establishing aerial shots in the movie version as the plot crosses continents.

Grisham fans will devour it; but there were times when this reader wished the action would slow down a little so we could spend some time with the characters. Mitch is always on the move 鈥 in a car, on a plane, in a boardroom 鈥 conversations are clipped, and the plot pace is furious.

Grisham certainly reflects the urgency of Mitch鈥檚 mission in his writing, but some of the best parts of the book are when the story gets a chance to breathe a little, as in this scene on a boat off the coast of Maine:

鈥淭anner inched the throttle up a notch and the wake grew wider. They were nearing a cove with the Atlantic not far away. The water was deep blue and flat, but an occasional wave sent mist over the boat and refreshed everyone. With his left hand, Mitch reached over and took hers.鈥

It鈥檚 not much, but in this frenetic novel, it鈥檚 a moment that conveys the love between Mitch and Abby without words and maybe, just maybe, the promise of an extended future where they aren鈥檛 always on the run.

___

AP book reviews:

Rob Merrill, The Associated Press