Grisham himself said that he writes “to grab readers. Some critics have faulted Grisham for shallow character development and for implausible plots other critics point out, however, that popular fiction is virtually defined by such plots. However, Grisham cannot be counted on to give his readers a standard happy ending. government, the Mafia, giant insurance companies. Ultimately they may win out over antagonists of apparently superior strength: the U.S. They find themselves fighting against overwhelming odds in situations in which they should not be able to prevail. His plots usually center around protagonists who are young and in some way vulnerable, who are placed in extraordinary circumstances. With The Firm, Grisham began a pattern (some critics call it a formula) that he used, with variations, in most of his succeeding books.
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