The Runaway Jury

The Runaway Jury

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3.85 of 5 stars 3.85  ·  rating details  ·  109,785 ratings  ·  1,054 reviews
When justice is for sale, every jury has a price





In Biloxi, Mississippi, a landmark trial begins. There are hundreds of millions of dollars at stake and soon it swerves mysteriously off course. The jury is behaving strangely, and at least one juror is convinced he's being watched. Soon they have to be sequestered. Then a tip from an anonymous young woman suggests she is abl...more
Paperback, 496 pages
Published January 3rd 1997 by Arrow Books (first published 1996)
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Ben
Nicholas Easter, juror number 2 and a mysterious woman known as Marlee conspire to manipulate the jury to secure a verdict in a landmark trial involving a widow plaintiff (whose husband died of lung cancer because of cigarette addiction) and a big tobacco company. They have to play with both sides (the plaintiff and the defense) and go up against a cunning jury consultant Rankin Fitch who is an expert in jury manipulations. Fitch works for the defense.

The Runaway Jury is an intensely suspenseful...more
Alex
The Runaway Jury by John Grisham
The Runaway Jury by John Grisham draws you into a story of power. While the widow of a man who was killed by lung cancer, after smoking for most of his life, is suing a tobacco company, the reader finds out that this is not a normal trial case. Usually the side with the most votes gets their verdict, but now there is a single powerful person who controls all of it.

The widow’s lawyer is named Mr. Rohr. He is trying to make it big because he knows if he wins this t...more
Eric_W
Runway Jury, is the more traditional Grisham, but a nifty suspense-filled story. I really enjoyed it. Lawyers will hate it, as it portrays them as terrible blood-sucking-win-at-any-cost malevolent characters. Fortunately, in this novel they get their due.
In this novel Grisham dissects the tobacco industry. Given the absolutely stunning amount of money involved in the recent class action suits against the tobacco companies, Grisham starts with the assumption, a quite reasonable one, that the i...more
Hugo Stetz
"The Runaway Jury," a novel written by John Grisham, is a book that is able to tell a very intriguing story in such a way that the reader simply can't put the book down once they start reading it. It may be classified by many to be part of a minor genre, but it can be easily said that this book can appeal to a very large a diverse audience.
Though this novel is set in a setting that is fairly similar to our own present time, the plot that it tells is able to turn the environment in which it is to...more
Harv Griffin
Mar 04, 2013 Harv Griffin rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Do you like courtroom drama?
Shelves: own, reviewed
pic of my copy of Runaway Jury

John Grisham novels are a good “first read” for me; but I usually have no desire to revisit the books. RUNAWAY JURY is one I have gone back to re-read many times. The movie is also a treat, with Gene Hackman & Dustin Hoffman.

A potential juror and his outside partner target and stalk the trials against Big Tobacco; hoping to get him on as a juror in a big case, which they manage to accomplish. While Big Tobacco is pulling every dirty trick in the book and inventing new dirty tricks to force...more
Kathryn Lucas
I'm glad I didn't pay for this book. Our apartment building has a bookcase in front of the elevator, and someone in the building must be a Grisham fan, because I've picked up several of his books from the communal bookcase. This is the worst of the Grishams that I've read.

What annoyed me the most was the sheer implausibility of the whole story. The civil tobacco trial itself was plausible enough, but the jury foreman protagonist and his accomplice on the outside have a plan to influence the tria...more
Shane
This book was quite entertaining, although it wasn't anything special. I was amazed at how much drama Grisham could milk out of a civil lawsuit, and I appreciated it that he didn't try to forceably "spruce-up" the action with random gun battles or kidnappings or something like that. The thriller was in the prose, and that was good.
Unusually, I felt this was a book with no sympathetic hero. Nicholas Easter, the main juror, is conniving, as is his partner Marlee; neither set of lawyers are particu...more
Carol
In this saga, Grisham examines more closely than in his other novels the process of choosing a jury that can best respond to both the plantiff and the defendent without filling the 12 chairs with people who have too much prejudice for either side. There are people hired to help in the jury picking process, and they study every aspect of a potential juror's life. The culprit on trial in The Runaway Jury is the tobacco industry and the plaintiff is someone who lost a family member to lung cancer d...more
Remi Immler
Wendell Rohr is a lawyer taking on the gun lobby for Celeste Wood. Rankin Fitch is for the defendants. Between them, they have to fight ot see if their is any advantage they can take from the jurors selected. But there is someone on the inside. Nicholas Easter is a juror with a girlfriend, Marlee, on the outside. they have a past together and their own plans for court.
When a day trader is shot where he works, his widow sues a major gun manufacturer and blaming them for his death, since they s...more
Jerry
Solid Grisham effort, a little preachy, great end suspense...

We tend to categorize Grisham’s novels into three groups: fast-paced thrillers, like the “Pelican Brief” and “The Firm”; slow paced dramas, like “The Chamber” and “A Painted House”; and a middle group of “message stories” that mix the characteristics of the other two. “Jury” falls into that third class, featuring mostly courtroom drama but with the intrigue of jury tampering and manipulation thrown in for good measure. It’s also a bit...more
Lynda
The Runaway Jury is marked as suspense, but I didn’t think there was much suspenseful about it. Nicholas Easter is selected as a juror in a tobacco trial. He’s a friendly guy with two years of law school behind him and all the jurors respect him and sometimes even look to him to explain what’s going on.

Inside the courtroom, the plaintiff is trying to prove that a man died directly from cigarette smoking. They throw in all sorts of obscure facts about advertising and targetting kids. Things that...more
Joe
Reviewing a John Grisham book? I know, I can't believe it either. But I've read this book about half a dozen times, and every time, it pulls me in.

I've read an incredible number of John Grisham books. They're always very readable, but sometimes the story seems pretty stretched, or just not very compelling. This book doesn't have those problems. The plot focuses on a civil trial, involving the widow of a cancer patient that is suing a cigarette manufacturer. The twist is that one of the jurors is...more
Joey O'toole
Nov 11, 2012 Joey O'toole rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Law & Order fans
The Runaway Jury Book Review
By: Joey O'Toole

The Runaway Jury is a popular legal thriller novel written by John Grisham. It was first published in 1996, and a movie based off the book came out in 2003. Anyways, I think the book was decent, it can get monotonous with all the legal terminology, but nonetheless it was enjoyable. It's a book you really have to pay attention to or else you'll get lost in the plot twists and turns. It's a good example on how much a jury can effect the case, and how muc...more
Mikey
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Julaybib
Buku ini sangat tipikal Grisham, memanfaatkan celah dari hukum yang ada untuk membuat suatu cerita yang luar biasa (karena dilebih-lebihkan dan didramatisir tentunya). Intinya, sistem yang ada tidak akan pernah sempurna dan selalu dimanfaatkan oleh orang yang tidak bertanggung jawab atau tidak memiliki etika untuk memaksimalkan keuntungan pribadi. Celah dari sistem yang dipilih oleh Grisham kali ini adalah proses pemilihan dan fungsi juri dalam peradilan.

Diceritakan bahwa di Amerika, kini berdir...more
Kathy Stone
I really liked this book. There are many horrible characters, but they keep you reading and that is important to me. The subject of the trial is a hard one to read as I do remember tobacco trials from the 1990's. If what Grisham proposes in this novel is really true than all those class action lawsuits are completely frivolous and recent tobacco legislation is completely bogus. I just had to get that out of me. Class action lawsuits and the punitive money trials that spark them irritate me. I fi...more
Satrajit Sanyal
The Runaway Jury, the bad guys are tobacco-company executives, their fat-cat attorneys, and a remarkably sleazy team of behind-the-scenes operatives whose job it is to make sure that cigarette manufacturers never lose a product-liability lawsuit no matter what. No crooked tactic short of murder is beneath them — bribery, blackmail, smears, shakedowns. And that leads to the novel's one real problem: For the longest time it's hard to tell if there are any decent characters in the story at all.

Inde...more
Dana Salman

After being asked more than a billion times to write the causes and effects of smoking in an essay, or to pursuade someone to stop smoking in an essay, and after having to set up an anti-smoking campaign with the rest of my class for biology last year, when no one in the entire student body smokes (atleast not in the girl section), and moreover after my grandmother passed away from lung cancer that I'm pretty sure was a result of second-hand smoking, and now, having finished this book, I can say...more
Michael Johnston
This is the first time that I have seen the movie before I've read the book. I thoroughly enjoyed the movie (despite its faults) and I was curious to see if the book would be as interesting. No let down here. The book (not surprisingly) had room for much deeper character studies and the suspense and surprise were just as potent. There are times when I think Grisham would benefit from a sparser story telling, but the added shades in this story were (mostly) to the benefit of plot.

My one complian...more
Beverly.reid
I have always wanted to be on jury duty. Perhaps that is why I enjoyed this legal thriller by John Grisham. It is about a widow suing a tobacco company because her husband died of lung cancer and he smoked their cigarettes for thirty years. The verdict, especially a verdict involving large punitive damages, would have ramifications for the entire industry. The “Big Four” companies CEO’s band together and contribute money to help the defense against the plaintiff and resort to some dirty tricks t...more
Helynne
In this saga, the prolific Grisham examines more closely than in his other novels the process of choosing a jury that can best respond to both the plantiff and the defendent without filling the 12 chairs with people who have too much natural prejudice for either side. The culprit on trial in The Runaway Jury is the tobacco industry and the plaintiff is someone who lost a family member to lung cancer due to smoking. The process by which a certain man-woman team manages to gerrymander a jury in a...more
Kelli Sutton
Climax. That is what stuck out to me most about this story. Through out the story you always wanted to know what was up with the main character. He was someone that you just couldn't figure it out. And just when you thought you knew where the story was going bam! the author hit you with the climax.

As a writer I greatly admire Grisham's use of climax. This isn't the first book of his that I have read where he implores this use of climax. As a writer of a story of suspense or a thriller you must...more
Jolo Manansala
Thrilling. That's the one word I would choose to describe this book, no matter how cliche the word is. What got me started on reading was the fact that I'm in my third week of summer and I am bored like hell. When I asked my uncle if he had any books I could read, he suggested John Grisham. I have to admit, that crossed my mind but a few years back, I tried reading Playing For Pizza and I couldn't get past the first few chapters. I guess you could blame my then childish mind, because I just love...more
Christopher  Ryan
My mother in law, who doesn't speak English, gave this book to me. I hadn't read a JG book since I was twelve, but I ended up on the toilet with it, and that's where I read 99% of it. It's a good book for the toilet, because you end up getting your business done sooner. I highly recommend it for that purpose.

Literature it is not. The prose is as flat as old roadkill, the characters dull, vague, and interchangeable, the plot perfect for some Ashley Judd feature film (I assume there is a movie ver...more
Steve Giles
The Runaway Jury was a great book about a tobacco trail in Mississippi. The leader of the defense, a Mr. Rankin Fitch, had been involved in many trials like this - and had won every one. He was even able to pull out a mistrial in a case that wasn't working in his favor.
Nicholas Easter became a member of the jury, but could he, with the help of his friend Marlee, ultimately control the jury and force them to vote in honor of the plaintiff? Nicholas and Marlee were previously involved with a tria...more
Ellen
I am a big John Grisham fan, and I really enjoyed this book. It's my favorite so far of the ones that I've read. It keeps you guessing the whole time, and and it is more humorous than I expected. The characters are complex and interesting, and the legal matter in the story is real and riveting. It deals with the tobacco industry and its lack of compassion for the people that buy their product and suffer many medical problems. It will have you convinced that smoking results in a one-way ticket to...more
Genna
A great book. Well written and the twist in the end was quite unexpected. The only thing was that it was hard for me to relate to the book in anyways. I guess it's just not a book for chemistry students as the story itself is based on courts, law, manipulating peoples minds and most of all greed. The story did have a good insight of how greedy large industries were when it comes to money but it's not really new news as we've all lived through it at least once in our lives. Story was plot out wel...more
Srinath Padmanabhan
Mar 24, 2012 Srinath Padmanabhan rated it 3 of 5 stars Recommends it for: Only Die hard Grisham fans.
The Story about a Tobacco Trial where lawyers on both sides along with their experts do what all they can( of course illegal) to get the verdict for their side. On the other hand a women name Marlee is able to predict the unusual events done by the jury and she makes a deal with Fitch, who works for the tobacco company. The major portion of the book revolves around people giving lectures about Cigarettes and Nicotine and how Fitch digs info about all jury members and the cat and mouse game betwe...more
Jane Stewart
Very entertaining. Very worthwhile. I wish more romance authors would write like him, but add romance.

REVIEWER’S OPINION:
For another book someone wrote “literary slugger John Grisham returns with a story about...” I thought how true. He is a literary slugger – almost always on the New York Times best seller list. I periodically read John Grisham to remind me of great writing.

I have loved several John Grisham’s books, and this is another one. A number of things had me chuckling with surprise. Th...more
Amanda Roo
I decided to give this book a try, since people are always raving about Grisham and his court room dramas. I found it mildly enjoyable, although a tad predictable and a bit redundant at times. I felt like it dragged on for much to long, and could easily have been trimmed down a few hundred pages and still keep the same story. The characters were well-developed for the most part; there were a few who quietly faded into the background, only to re-appear occasionally as though to remind the reader...more
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Reviews? 21 91 Oct 17, 2012 06:52am  
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"Long before his name became synonymous with the modern legal thriller, he was working 60-70 hours a week at a small Southaven, Mississippi law practice, squeezing in time before going to the office and during courtroom recesses to work on his hobby—writing his first novel.

Born on February 8, 1955 in Jonesboro, Arkansas, to a construction worker and a homemaker, John Grisham as a child dreamed of...more
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A Time to Kill The Firm The Client The Pelican Brief The Rainmaker

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