Just finished another John Grisham. Even though I haven't loved his latest stuff, I've been reading all his books for so long that I can't not read his newest. "The Associate" was a little slow going at first. I wasn't all that interested the first couple of chapters. However, as is often the case with many books, perseverance is rewarded. The plot picked up, the characters started to get fleshed out and it got interesting. I enjoyed the book. Grisham is great about providing the the kind of detailed plots that I love. Occasionally the conversations got muddled so that you started to lose track of who was saying what. I hate that! It's a skilled author who can have conversations that flow in a way that is easy to follow without putting "Jack said" then "Mary replied" on every line. Very tricky stuff.This book contains another of Grisham's trademark suspenseful storylines set in the big world of American law and commerce. A very smart young lawyer is black-mailed into working for a big hot-shot law firm in order to attempt to steal information about a massive lawsuit that the firm is handling. The lawsuit involves a defense contract for the US government. The dirt the black-mailers have on the young lawyer is an inappropriate situation he and his frat brothers were involved with when he was in college. A drunk, promiscuous girl and a frat party; you get the picture. Anyway, even though this particular guy did nothing wrong, he was in the wrong place at the wrong time. He is terrified that this one foolish mistake may cost him a career as a lawyer if this girl is persuaded to take him to court. This seems a little bit of a flimsy reason to succumb to blackmail to me, but guilt over the past can cause any of us to respond emotionally rather than rationally when faced with our most regretful past mistakes.
If you like John Grisham, you will like this book. I wish the writing was a sharp and skilled as his earlier works, his work seems a little simplistic and and mechanical compared to his earlier stuff, but how many books can one person write well, really? Perhaps publisher deadlines have muted his creative vibe. A necessary evil since he's making a really good living these days!

