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| Grisham, John: The Firm
Grisham, John: The Firm
The
Firm
Contents:
1 Synopsis
This story is set in 1985, although it was written
in 1981. John Grisham tells us a story of the Mafia and a young student out of
law school who could have any firm in the country but choose lowly Bendini,
Lambert and Locke.
This boy is Mitchell McDeere, who is at the top of
his class at Harvard Law and so he has his choice of the best in America. He has
got three job offers and decides to take the one of a well-paying firm in
Memphis. But unfortunately this should become a deadly mistake.
When Mitch McDeere signs on with Bendini, Lambert
& Locke of Memphis, he thinks he and his wife, Abby, are finally on their
way. The firm leases him a BMW, pays off his school loans, arranges a mortgage
and hires him a decorator. He ignores the fact that five lawyers died over a
period of 15 years. Mitch McDeere should have better remembered what his brother
Ray - sitting since fifteen years in a Tennessee jail - already knew. You never
get nothing for nothing.
So Mitchell McDeere finds out the Firm is owned by
the most powerful Mob family in Chicago, and that they are laundering big sums
of money through dummy corporations around the world. Before long he stumbles
upon a secret that could bring every member of the firm, including himself, in
jail. After talking with the FBI, who tells him among other things that his home
phone was bugged and that there also are bugs in his car, in his home, even in
the bedroom and that the firm has killed the lawyers and that they are killing
everybody who does not want to work with them, Mitch still does not want to
believe it.
His wife, Abby, wants him to leave the firm because
it will make him a wreck, due to the fact that he works about 90 hours a week in
order to become a partner as soon as possible. Eddie Lomax, a friend of Mitch`s
brother Ray, who is in prison, who is hired by Mitch to investigate into the
case of the dead lawyers, also advises Mitch to leave the firm. But only some
hours after the conversation Eddie is killed. Eddie`s secretary, Tammy Hemphill,
understands the real situation and meets Mitch. Also the FBI contacts Mitch
again. They want him to copy all illegal files of the firm. They "promise" to
take him to prison, if he would not co-operate,. If he agrees to co-operate he
will get 2.000.000$, a new identity for him and his wife and the FBI would help
Ray to escape from prison. Now McDeere realises that he is trapped and cannot
escape without risk. So he has two choices: 1. He can obtain incriminating
evidence against his co-workers, turn it in to the FBI, and avoid jail. If he
does this, however, he can be killed by clients of the firm, the Mafia. 2.
McDeere can avoid the FBI, work at the firm, and live a prosperous life, only to
be arrested at some point in the future and serve a lengthy jail sentence.
McDeere is faced with a tough decision, and after he decides, he must face the
consequences. Mitch is caught between a rock and a hard place, with no choice --
if he wants to live.
As Tammy promises to help him, and as he finds a
way not to break his professional discretion, he decides to work for the FBI.
So he takes every file out of the building, and Tammy assists him. At one point
he takes them with him to a wrong client, Frank Mulholland, and Tammy copies
them in the neighbouring office. Another time Tammy plays a prostitute in Cayman
and steals the office keys from Avery Tolleson. So they find a lot of different
ways to copy the files. Also his wife Abby helps them.
But then the firm finds a leak in the FBI:
"Alfred", an FBI man who betrays Mitch. Because of this leak Mitch decides to
take the money, his wife, and his brother and to escape without telling the FBI
where he is going. While he is fleeing he sends the files to the FBI: So the FBI
and the Mafia are searching for the three McDeeres, who are hidden in Andi`s
Hotel. Then Ray notices a woman who follows them and holds her up. So they have
to escape from the police as well. They kill a Mafia man, who wants to kill the
McDeeres and escape at the end on a boat - like in nearly every novel: There is
a Happy-Ending!
Comment
John Grisham has written with The Firm one of the
most intense legal thrillers of our time.
It is simply a great book, another spectacular
blockbuster, but certainly not without its flaws. I found it lagged a little at
the beginning, but I cannot regard that as a setback. Most thrillers take a
while to build up, after all. The first chapters certainly were good, as they
established character and mood, and set me up for surprises. Once the conflict
was established, I could not put down the book; it became a real page-turner!
This book, the firm, holds you on suspense... until about the middle of the
book, where you realise what will happen. The code names and the delaying of
information does make the book a bit more interesting. Of course the idea of
having a law firm as a front for the Mafia where once you get in you cannot get
out - alive, was extremely entertaining. The book brings out the reality of
corruption in some law firms that look too good to be true.
But, when I read The Firm, I noticed a very large
similarity to The Client. Maybe it was even a mixture of The Pelican Brief and
The Client. It has The Pelican Brief`s runaway, chase, know-something-wrong plot
and it has The Client`s know-too-much plot and it`s
suspense.
3 About the book
3.1 Topic
The book was not only about a up coming lawyer torn
between a law firm that was doing bad business and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, but it was also about a little thing we call peer
pressure.
Mitchell McDeere was a confused man not knowing
whether to co-operate with the government or with the people that he worked for.
Teenagers can relate to this because it`s like not knowing whether to listen to
the authority in their lives or their friends. Of course in the book the main
character chooses the right thing, unfortunately too many teenagers choose to go
the opposite way.
This book teaches a valuable lesson, it states
simply that when you are caught between the right decision and the wrong
decision, the right decision is always the best way to
go.
3.2 Recommendation
First of all I would recommend The Firm to anyone
who has plenty time to kill.
Then, of course I would highly recommend this book
to anyone who has never read any of Grisham`s books or has not the slightest
interest in law or any matters related to it. I also think, that The Firm is the
right book for anyone who gets excited of stories/thrillers about the cold war
in business.
3.3 The Movie
Already in 1990, before the book was published,
Paramount Pictures paid $600,000 for the rights to the Firm. The movie however
was a big disappointment.
But at least the ending was much better, because it
ended differently from the novel. In my opinion the novel`s ending is a kind of
flat. But it does leave you with a smile on your face because Grisham gives you
a tease on the second to last line.
4 The author
"Grisham writes six months a year"
4.1 Life of John Grisham
John Grisham was born on February 8th in
1955 in Jonesboro, Arkansas. He was raised in a family of five children. During
his youth he moved around a lot because his father was a construction worker.
They lived in many different places, for example in Crenshaw, Mississippi.
Finally the Grisham family settled in Southaven, a little town outside Memphis,
when he was twelve and then he started studying at the Southaven High School.
During his school years he was an athlete and he
wanted to play either professional football or baseball. This interest of his
made him go to study at the Northwest Mississippi Junior College in 1973. At the
Northwest he played baseball for a year and he really did not care for his
grades, he just wanted to play baseball. Grisham moved to the Delta State
University after a year at Northwest to improve his skills in baseball. At the
Delta State University he found out that he really was not meant to be a
baseball player and so he decided to concentrate on his studies, which he had
not done before. So he moved once again, this time to the Mississippi State
University (1975). John Grisham really liked the Mississippi State University
and he started studying for an accounting major. Since he could not become a
professional baseball player anymore he now thought of becoming a tax lawyer.
Grisham graduated from the Mississippi State University in 1977 with an
accounting major. After studying at the Mississippi State University he went to
law-school at the University of Mississippi, from which he graduated in 1981. In
the same year as he graduated from law-school he married Renee
Jones.
John Grisham was now a lawyer and he got himself an
office in Southaven where he practised criminal and civil law. He was also
politically engaged at this time and in 1983 he was elected to the Mississippi
House of Representatives. During his time at Mississippi State University he had
started on two books, none of them were ever finished. In 1984 he started
writing a third. This time he finished it. The original title of the book was
Deathknell, but the publisher did not like that so he changed it to A Time to
Kill. In April 1987 three agents called and the year after, in 1988 the book was
sold to Wynwood Press. A year after it was published and 5,000 copies were
printed. During these years he had been writing his second book, the Firm, which
was finished in 1988. In the same year he started writing on his third book, The
Pelican Brief. The Firm was then his big hit. It was the book that made him
famous. In 1990 he left the House of Representatives and moved from Southaven to
a farm outside Oxford.
Today he lives in Charlottesville, Virginia with
his wife Renee and his two kids Ty and Shea. Grisham writes six months a year
and coaches his son`s Little League team the other half. He only gives a few
interviews a year and he has said that he hates reviews. John Grisham just wants
to write books and live peacefully and undisturbed with his
family.
4.2 His books
From 1991 to today he has published one book a
year.
The Time To Kill (1986)
The Firm (1988)
A Pelican Brief (1992)
The Chamber (1993)
The Rainmaker (1995)
The Runaway Jury (1996)
The Partner (1997)
The Street Lawyer (1998)
Ever since he wrote the Pelican Brief Grisham has
published a book a year with the same result. It should be said that all his
books have been best-sellers and that six of them have become movies (The
Client, The Pelican Brief, The Firm, The Time to Kill, The Chamber and The
Rainmaker). John Grisham has also written the script to the movie the
Gingerbread Man and a script to a baseball movie.
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