What is left to say about a new John Grisham novel?

Author John Grisham. PHOTO | FILE

What you need to know:

  • Grisham has even written a YA legal series featuring a 13-year-old amateur legal eagle named “Theodore Boone”.
  • Dame Agatha Christie, who barely paused between books to sharpen pencils during her near-50-year marathon mystery career, is another such marvel.

What is there left to say about a new John Grisham novel? Maybe only that Grisham has done it again.

The Guardians is Grisham’s 40th novel; he’s now 64 and has been writing suspense novels pretty much nonstop since A Time to Kill was published in 1989.
Most of his novels are legal thrillers, but Grisham has also branched out into stories about rare books, sports and medicine.

(His 2015 e-book, The Tumor, is about an experimental cancer treatment called focused ultrasound technology that Grisham champions.) Grisham has even written a YA legal series featuring a 13-year-old amateur legal eagle named “Theodore Boone”.

Such creative longevity is not that unusual in the suspense genre, but what is rare is Grisham’s feat of keeping up the pace of producing, on average, a novel a year (in 2017 he published two) without a notable diminishment of ingenuity or literary quality.

BARELY PAUSED

Dame Agatha Christie, who barely paused between books to sharpen pencils during her near-50-year marathon mystery career, is another such marvel.
Which brings us to The Guardians, Grisham’s latest terrific novel. Grisham’s main character here is a so-called “innocence lawyer”, a workaholic attorney-and-Episcopal-priest named Cullen Post.

Post has trimmed his life down to the barest of essentials, living in spartan quarters above the non-profit Guardian Ministries, his workplace in Savannah, Ga.

The book focuses on Post’s investigation into the wrongful conviction of a black man named Quincy Miller, who was set up to take the fall for the murder of a white lawyer in a small Florida town some 22 years before the opening of this story. (In his life away from his writing desk, Grisham serves on the board of directors of The Innocence Project.)

Post’s efforts to ferret out exculpatory evidence in this cold case put him in grave danger because, for one thing, the shadowy drug cartel responsible for the murder has been known to hold grisly parties in isolated jungle locales south of the border.

TRAUMATISED SURVIVOR

In the dead centre of this novel, Post hears a cautionary tale from a traumatised survivor of one of these gatherings. This account calls upon Grisham to summon up his heretofore unrealised inner Caligula.

In an affecting backstory, Post recalls his early career as a public defender; but the grotesque contradictions of that job — particularly Post’s final assignment to defend a depraved teenage rapist and murderer — brought on a nervous breakdown.

After a sincere “come-to-Jesus” moment during his recovery, Post was ordained and began serving with a prison ministry, which led him to innocence work and eventually Guardian Ministries.

A trim four-person operation, Guardian Ministries consists of Post; an underpaid litigator who’s a single mother of boys; an exoneree named Frankie who’s turned private investigator; and the nonprofit’s founder, a former business executive who, similar to Post, had a conversion experience and dedicated her life to writing wrongs of the criminal justice system.

MORAL VISION

That said, The Guardians is nuanced in its moral vision: Post acknowledges that most of the prisoners who contact him alleging wrongful convictions are, in fact, guilty; but it’s the thousands of others who have become his vocation.

“It’s fairly easy to convict an innocent man and virtually impossible to exonerate one,” Post reminds a potential client. So far, the team has exonerated eight prisoners.

Quincy Miller may just become the ninth. His fate will depend on a relentless reinvestigation conducted by Post and his colleagues and some strong-arming of jailhouse snitches and other witnesses who gave false testimony years ago.

The lawyer Quincy was convicted of killing turns out to have had ties to a drug cartel. So, too, does the now-retired sheriff who was in charge of the investigation 22 years ago. Post knows he’ll eventually have to visit the secluded scene of the crime, Seabrook, Fla, but he wisely hesitates.

The climax of The Guardians slyly nods to many a classic Nancy Drew adventure: Post and Frankie steel themselves to break into a boarded-up haunted house, climb up into its dank attic and unearth a “clew” that just may decide Miller’s fate — all before the drug gang gets wind of their location.

Post is a driven and likable loner whom, I hope, Grisham will bring back in future novels. After all, as The Guardians makes clear, there’s plenty of work left for an innocence lawyer to do.

Maureen Corrigan, Washington Post