The Litigators

by John Grisham | 400 pages, published 2011litigators

You know the format of a Grisham novel, right? An honest and fundamentally good lawyer is working for a big, bad firm. In this particular novel, the good lawyer quits the firm and joins a small, poorly-run litigation firm that takes on a huge case. Not surprisingly, they lose the case, but they win where it counts. Happiness and good fortune come to the good guys. The bad guys are still rich, but that’s not important!

I did like the book, though. I confess to having a weakness for legal fiction . . .

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Elantris

by Brandon Sanderson | 496 pages, published 2005elantris

I hesitated to read another Brandon Sanderson book after finishing the Mistborn trilogy. Here’s why I’m reluctant to read more by an author I enjoyed: not every book is going to be great writing. Somewhere along they way, there’s going to be something mediocre. (It can happen because the editors gave the author too much leeway, like with Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, or because the author wasn’t as experienced in his or her early days, or because sometimes mediocre books just get published.) I dearly love A Wrinkle in Time, and a lot of Madeleine L’Engle’s other work, but I read Many Waters last year and it was – you guessed it – mediocre. For that reason, I haven’t read any of Lloyd Alexander’s non-Prydain books. And I wasn’t convinced that I wanted to read any more Brandon Sanderson books, considering how much I liked Mistborn. I didn’t want to ruin my idea of him as a great author.

Fortunately, Elantris didn’t ruin it. Reluctant as I was, I loved the book. If you don’t want to spend time on a 1500+ page trilogy, Elantris is a wonderful stand-alone book with likable, believable characters, a really good magic system, and a great plot structure. So if you aren’t ready for the Mistborn trilogy, try Elantris! I don’t think you’ll regret it. I didn’t.

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Our Tragic Universe

by Scarlett Thomas | 384 pages, published 2010tragic

Another book that I’m not sure who recommended it or how it ended up on my reading list. And, another one I wish I’d skipped and would enjoy having a paper copy to throw in the trash. (I read it on the Kindle.)

This is a story-within-a-story-within-a-story, but they’re all awful stories. The main character is a writer, but also a very philosophical individual who has long conversations with like-minded individuals in ways that I doubt real people ever converse. I don’t know anyone who I care to listen to paragraphs of without giving me a chance to ask questions or share my opinion. The conversations in the book end up being more like staged debates – lengthy ones – than anything realistic. I do enjoy discussing deep matters; I like talking with well-educated, opinionated people; I hated the conversations in the book.

I also hated the bigger and smaller stories. The book seemed to be written as a way of saying, “Look what non-story-format writing I can do because I’m a real author!” That was even the point of the main character’s writing. High-brow? I don’t know, I think maybe this was just a dumb idea. But it has great reviews on Amazon. What is wrong with the world? Or is something wrong with me?

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