"The hill people and the Mexicans arrived on the same day. It was a Wednesday, early in September 1952. The Cardinals were five games behind the Dodgers with three weeks to go, and the season looked hopeless. The cotton, however, was waist-high to my father, over my head, and he and my grandfather could be heard before supper whispering words that were seldom heard. It could be a "good crop." Thus begins the new novel from John Grisham, a story inspired by his own childhood in rural Arkansas. The narrator is a farm boy named Luke Chandler, age seven, who lives in the cotton fields with his parents and grandparents in a little house that's never been painted. The Chandlers farm eighty acres that they rent, not own, and when the cotton is ready they hire a truckload of Mexicans and a family from the Ozarks to help harvest it.
For six weeks they pick cotton, battling the heat, the rain, the fatigue, and sometimes each other. As the weeks pass Luke sees and hears things no seven-year-old could possibly be prepared for, and he finds himself keeping secrets that not only threaten the crop but will change the lives of the Chandlers forever.
John Grisham is the author of forty-nine consecutive #1 bestsellers, which have been translated into nearly fifty languages. His recent books include The Judge's List, Sooley, and his third Jake Brigance novel, A Time for Mercy, which is being developed by HBO as a limited series.
Grisham is a two-time winner of the Harper Lee Prize for Legal Fiction and was honored with the Library of Congress Creative Achievement Award for Fiction.
When he's not writing, Grisham serves on the board of directors of the Innocence Project and of Centurion Ministries, two national organizations dedicated to exonerating those who have been wrongfully convicted. Much of his fiction explores deep-seated problems in our criminal justice system.
I learned that John Grisham should write more books in this genre because this is his best work....forget all those clients, partners, pelicans. One night, with a bunch of old friends in an apartment above Times Square, we tuned in to tv before turning in and The Bill Moyers Report was being aired; his guest was John Grisham. From his first responses, it was obvious that he possessed "gravitas" beyond his public persona. Grisham grew up in Arkansas, the son of a cotton farmer, and went on to Law School but swiftly left that field of endeavor. He was a born story teller and has used the law background to great advantage. The next week I read "The Partner" which was clever and classy and all those best-seller adjectives. However, as I started reading "The Painted House" it was a most touching, true and arresting book that deserves the most serious consideration. Not just a "coming of age" story, this book deals with so many universal themes that no one could read it without making contact. It is a beautiful book. Put it on your bedside table pile.
A Painted House is a 2001 novel by American author John Grisham.
Story is told through the eyes of seven-year-old Luke Chandler, the youngest in a family of cotton farmers struggling to harvest their crop and earn enough to settle their debts.
عنوانهای چاپ شده در ایران: «خانه نقاشی شده»؛ «خانه رنگ شده»؛ نویسنده: جان گریشام؛ تاریخ نخستین خوانش روز دوم ماه اکتبر سال2002میلادی
عنوان: خانه نقاشی شده؛ نویسنده: جان گریشام؛ مترجم فریده مهدوی دامغانی؛ تهران، نشر علم، سال1380؛ د 680ص؛ شابک9644051254؛ موضوع: داستانهای نویسندگان ایالات متحده آمریکا - سده21م
عنوان: خانه رنگ شده؛ نویسنده: جان گریشام؛ مترجم هادی عادلپور؛ تهران، کوشش، سال1380؛ در496ص؛ شابک9646326889؛
رمان «خانه نقاشی شده» برعکس دیگر آثار «جان گریشام» غیرحقوقی است، استاد تریلرهای حقوقی، اینبار رمانی درباره ی کشت پنبه مینویسند؛ داستان هفت سالگی خویش را، که در ایالت «آرکانزاس»، کنار پدر، مادر، پدربزرگ، و مادر بزرگ خویش، زندگی میکردند، مینویسند؛ نویسنده در این رمان خود شاهد قتل یک جوان روستایی بوده اند
تاریخ بهنگام رسانی 13/01/1400هجری خورشیدی؛ 29/10/1400هجری خورش��دی؛ ا. شربیانی
In between the spaces of the urban monoliths spread across America lie thousands of rural communities, many of which were the first to feel the bites of recession and depression and the last to come out the other end. Set not so long after the Second World in rural Arkansas, this book follows one long summer in the life of seven year old Luke Chandler whose parents and grand parents run a cotton farm that just barely covers their cost of living. Like most recent years a group of Mexican farm labourers and a family of 'Hillbillies' come to work picking cotton over the Summer, a summer in which the harsh realities of the real world are railroaded into Luke's life.
Well this one came out of nowhere! Original published in serial form this is sparely written by deeply riveting read of groups of people at different levels of poverty existing (or not) together. My only criticism is that this smashing coming-of-age drama feels eschewed because of the very young age of Luke, and I can see why the Hallmark Movie of this book made him 1tem, which works so much better. Got to holler aa trigger warning for some of the man vs man violence but other wise it's a wonderful coming-of-age read, one of the best I've read in years; it's also my fave Grisham! A well deserved 9 out of 12, Four Star read.
Great read! therapeutic,compelling,enjoyable and a moving story...determination,twists and turns to hold your interest to the end..well written (paperback!)
I had forgotten about reading this one, until it became a recent donation to my Little Free Library Shed. I am now bringing my review to Goodreads.
Let me just say that this is not a legal thriller for which Grisham is typically known for – it is more a coming-of-age story.
I read that Grisham had originally serialized this in a different format in his magazine, The Oxford American, in a semi-autobiographical way, in which he shared about his growing up below the Mason-Dixon line.
Now, as a novel, it is set in 1952 Arkansas, narrated by 7-year-old Luke Chandler, the only child to a family of cotton farmers. The plot introduces us to a cast of eccentric characters including his father, grandfather, a hillbilly clan and migrant workers who work the farm.
We get a sense of the labor and weather of working a farm. And part of the weather includes the floods and tornadoes.
Grisham is trying very hard to keep readers from getting bored.
The plot also throws in an illegitimate birth, an interracial affair, and a couple of murders.
Grisham isn’t afraid to tell a story.
There is a folksy tone that is somewhat endearing. As readers we can’t help but feel hopeful for the future. That everyone will survive and do well. Especially little Luke Chandler.
This was such a horrible book! It had potential - I kept thinking the story would come around but once I got 2/3 way through the book, I knew there was no room left for a story. I finished it anyway and was really disappointed. There is absolutely NO story. Nothing. We are introduced to this family and the other characters for no reason. It's almost like the author had great ideas for characters but couldn't come up with a story line.
If you've never read Grisham and this is your first book - PLEASE don't judge him by it. This is, by far, his worst book in my opinion.
John Grisham’s legal thrillers were a big part of my high school reading repertoire. A Time to Kill, The Firm, The Client; I read them all and looked forward to each new book as part of my summer reading list. After a while, Grisham’s books became formulaic and rather than anticipate his next thriller, I put him aside for years, choosing instead books with a literary bent. John Grisham, the baseball fan? Most men of his generation are, but I did not make the connection until Grisham came into the Cubs television broadcast booth during a game to promote his new book, Calico Joe, which featured baseball and the Cubs front and center. As much as Grisham enjoyed taking in Wrigley Field, he grew up in the south as a die hard Cardinals fan. While Calico Joe had been a thought provoking book, I found out from friends in the baseball book club that Grisham had written another book featuring baseball, only this book was more biographical in nature as it takes the reader back to the south in the 1950s when cotton was still king and the Cardinals were the only baseball team that mattered. Still starving for baseball, I decided to pick up A Painted House and view the world from John Grisham’s childhood point of view.
In 1952, the Mexicans and hill people arrived on the same day. The Cardinals were six games back of the Dodgers with six weeks to play, the season all but over. To seven year old Luke Chandler, baseball was his world. The only child of cotton farmers living outside of Black Oak, Arkansas, Luke’s year centers on cotton and baseball season. He constructed a makeshift field in the front yard and played catch with his father and grandfather almost every night. We find out that both his father and grandfather had what it took to be major leaguers but after serving and being injured in World War I and II respectively, their baseball dreams were cut short, although his father could still play well. Luke, on the other hand, dreamed of getting off the farm. He was not going to plant cotton for the rest of his life because he was going to to St Louis and play for the Cardinals, every boy’s dream during that era. In the meantime, Luke would have to settle for a Cardinals jacket from the Sears Roebuck and Co catalogue. If he picked enough cotton during the harvest, he would have enough money to purchase the same jacket that all his favorite players wore. The thought of wearing the same jacket as his idol Stan Musial was enough to get Luke through another cotton harvest, even in a year when the Cardinals would not win the pennant.
Although Grisham tells this story through the eyes of a child, A Painted House is not without controversy. Small time farmers like the Chandlers rely on hired help to get them through a harvest. Each year, Black Oak families hired both Mexicans and hill people from Ozark country. In 1952, the Chandler’s hill people invited trouble. The Spruill family set up their camp on the Chandler’s front yard, the place where Luke had designated his baseball field. The family did not know their place and expected Luke to respect them as elders even though every hill family in the past treated their employers with reverence. Hank Spruill was a menace and scared not only Luke but everyone in Black Oak. His sister Tally was seventeen and invited Luke on many an adventure that was not appropriate for child viewing. That was just the hill people as Mexicans brought their own set of problems to Black Oak, including the inevitable showdown with the hill people, leading to tension during the cotton harvest. Yet, for cotton farmers, this is the risk they took when hiring help each year , although how many more years the Chandlers would farm remained to be seen.
Luke’s mother was a city girl and educated. She did not expect to live on a farm for her entire life nor did she expect her son to be a farmer. She grew up, said Luke, in a painted house. After his father was injured in World War II, he moved with his new wife to his parents’ farm to assist with the farming. Although married for ten years, one could see that the tension was always there, as it was a foregone conclusion that one day they would leave. Her pride and joy was the garden that could feed the entire Black Oak for an entire winter. Yet, one could sense that Kathleen Chandler wanted more, perhaps to teach school in a city or to give a better life to her son. This would never happen in Black Oak where the biggest thrills were going to the general store once a week and the annual Baptist vs Methodist picnic and baseball game. Kathleen desired a life where her son could attend Major League Baseball games and where his schooling was not interrupted each year by the cotton harvest. From the first descriptions of Kathleen Chandler, one could sense that this entire story was looking back at 1952 through Luke’s point of view and that eventually his family would leave the farm. Grisham had to create tensions from both the harvest itself and outsiders to make this happen.
Grisham takes a page from his formulaic thrillers to tie this book up neatly. Each event that occurs would be a blip in a larger community but dominated the chatter in Black Oak for weeks. Grisham himself grew up the son of cotton farmers and then left to attend law school, deciding on writing for his profession. One could tell that he wrote from the heart for this book but being used to his thrillers still wanted all the plot lines to end without controversy. One could sense that slowly the future was coming to Black Oak when Luke got to watch the 1952 World Series on a neighbor’s new television set; however, it was still too slow for his mother. A Painted House takes a look a southern farming community during a simpler era. The entire book was told from a seven year old’s point of view and was comprised of simple sentences that did not take much effort to read. One gets a glimpse at how it must have been for Grisham growing up, so one can appreciate how much effort it must have taken him to achieve academically to make it to law school. Although not a literary gem, it made for relaxing reading on a lazy, baseball starved summer afternoon.
A coming of age story. Luke Chandler a seven year old relates his last year on a cotton farm in Arkansas. John Grisham writes with extreme detail to paint a in-depth picture of the rural south. set in post dust bowl 1952.
My mother gave this to me and told me to take my time with it. she said it reminds her of going to her grandparents house in south Georgia. she spent a lot of time down there in the 60's before her parent moved permanently to Atlanta. This book reminds her of her childhood.
Told at a slow pace to match the slow pace of 1950 life. A Painted House could get a little boring but if your embrace the journey you will experience a novel with master storytelling. Luke Chandler is a sneak and a bit of a spy but a good kid nonetheless. He is also a huge Cardinals fan I'm a pretty big Atlanta Braves fan but this kid is obsessed with the St. Louis Cardinals. A Family of Hill people and a group of Mexicans come to the chandler farm to help pick cotton for the season. Many events happen and although slow paced the action is real and believable.
A Painted house was a great story and made me feel sad and laugh. i usually don't like coming of age slow paced tales but this was probably the best Grisham i have read so far!
For being from John Grisham, this was such a great book! For a long time I've enjoyed his legal thrillers, but after a while I suspected each book would be exactly the same as the last with the only difference being the plot. Granted that's one of the reasons I liked his novels, because I could trust they would be consistently good. When this book first came out I couldn't wait to read it and I fell in love with his ability to tell a heartfelt, meaningful story having nothing to do with law. I liked this book so much that I even recorded the Hallmark channel original that was made of it!
I was wary when this book came out - doubting Grisham could pull off historical fiction. Well he absolutely nailed it. It’s obvious Grisham drew from his personal experiences growing up in rural Arkansas. This is a heart-wrenching story of an impoverished farming community. It’s got it all, destitute share-croppers, migrant farm workers, a sweet young boy who lives for baseball, a devastating flood and a mentally unhinged murderer thrown in for good measure. I wonder if Grisham had written this under a pseudonym if it would have been taken more seriously. Who knows, even ranked as one of the great American novels - it was that good. Plus it inspired me to getting around to giving my house a fresh coat of paint.
A surprisingly good book. For me anyway because usually I'm not into the legal courtroom thrillers (which this book is not) so I have avoided Grisham. And I have to also humbly admit that I have only read one of his novels, The Firm, and I liked it. So, I think I will give the guy a chance and add another of his books.
I only read this because my mom recommended it and I felt like I needed to reciprocate because she usually reads my recommendations. Well, thanks mom. This was a pretty darn good read. There were some thrilling moments in the story but mostly it was just a down to earth story about a family's struggle and eventual overcoming of life's hardships.
Even though there were a couple of pretty harsh moments in the book I think I would have to call this a 'feel good' story. It's easy to read, entertaining, and I would recommend it to any of my friends.
Inspired by his own childhood in Arkansas, A Painted House is John Grisham'S first major work outside the legal thriller genre, the genre for which he is so well known.
Grisham’s trademark is suspense. If this isn’t a legal thriller, does the book at least have suspense? Yes, but only to the extent you can see the events of the summer of 1952 through Luke’s eyes. He is the central protagonist. He is seven, and it is he telling the story. In my view, Grisham captures remarkably well the world of a seven-year-old, a cotton grower’s son living in the South in the 1950s.
The longer I could stay in Luke's head, the longer I enjoyed the book. Occasionally though, I was jogged from Luke’s head back into my own, back into an adult’s way of thinking. The strength of the novel lies in its ability to show you the events of Luke’s summer through his eyes, not your own.
The events of that summer are not light and frivolous. They go beyond what a child of seven can be expected to fully understand. There are brawls and deaths, the birth of an illegitimate child, tornados, rainstorms and floods. The floods threaten economic ruin to the cotton growing families. There are also love affairs and a carnival and jokes and pranks. There’s a Baptist priest preaching sin and damnation. The fictional town where these people live is Black Oak. It is situated in the Arkansas Delta near the St. Francis River, a real tributary of the Mississippi. The farmers grow cotton. There is Luke and his family, sharecroppers and migrant workers from Mexico and the Ozarks. These are people struggling to survive. All are attempting to eke out a living as best they can, in a world where cotton prices, credit, the weather and the availability of labor are vital factors over which they have little control.
Through Luke’s eyes, the summer can be seen as a succession of secrets. If I were to give the book a title, it would be The Summer of Secrets--A Seven-Year-Old's Summer from the Cotton Fields of Arkansas . Luke has been raised not to keep secrets, at least not from his parents.
Beside capturing the mind of a child, the author also captures well the class hierarchy in a small southern farming community. Everyone is fully aware of their social standing. Even a seven-year-old will be aware of this too, but a seven-year-old is not going to analyze or philosophize. A child cannot be expected to draw adult conclusions. That the book’s narrator is a child of seven thus limits the scope of the book. On the other hand,that the book has a young narrator makes it suitable for young adults and kids. I think the events, as they roll out, will interest such an audience more than they did me. I became bored.
The audiobook is narrated by David Lansbury. His reading reinforces the child perspective. The whole feel of the book became too childish for me. Lansbury's narration makes not only Luke, but also his mother and grandmother, sound like kids. His reading was not to my taste. The most I can give the narration performance is two stars.
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If you are looking for a Grisham book that is not a legal thriller, my GR friend Philip recommends these:
"The hill people and the Mexicans arrived on the same day. It was a Wednesday, early in September 1952. The Cardinals were five games behind the Dodgers with three weeks to go, and the season looked hopeless. The cotton, however, was waist-high to my father, over my head, and he and my grandfather could be heard before supper whispering words that were seldom heard. It could be a `good crop.'"
This was a really pleasant surprise. When asked about John Grisham, most of us immediately think of his wide catalogue of legal thrillers and their film adaptations. A Painted House is nothing like his other work (I admit to having read only one title - The Firm - a fact that I intend to change in due time) because it in no way relates to his traditional formula of legal thrilers. There is not a single lawyer in A Painted House; the best we get is a single policeman, because this story is set in rural Arkansas in 1952.
The novel is narrated in first person by a certain Luke Chandler, who also happens to be seven year old. The Chandler family are cotton farmers, and the book chronicles their struggles from late summer to early fall, when they harvest their crop with the help of Mexicans And Hill People. Luke will spend many hours picking cotton and living a boy's life; he'll hear things he shouldn't hear and see things he shouldn't see. These experiences will change him, as he'll have to grow up and face the dangers of adult life. But there will be many pleasant moments, too; the carniva;, first crush and many sweets from the stores in town. The people on farms have to be tough, or they won't survive. We experience their simple joys like listening to a baseball broadcast, but we also experience their despair with difficult harvest, their variness of people from other regions, the town gossip and the ever present preachers.
This book is the testament to Grisham's ability to tell a meaningful, sweet story that has nothing to do with the law. As he himself grew up in Arkansas, the novel has a certain autobiographical feel to it, and many events might have occured to the 7 year old John as well (I think many of them dealt with snakes). Grisham's narrator's voice is precocious but not offensive; easy to read and very desriptive. This is not a coutroom drama, but the book is just as suspenseful, if not even more; the events and the characters are well drawn and memorable, and we only wish we could spend more time with them. This is a very sweet coming of age story, dealing with universal themes, which is also a real delight to get immersed in. Forget the chambers, appeals and clients; check in at the Painted House.
Amazingly I had never ever heard of this Grisham work until I read the book. I have seen many a book made into a movie and never really liked any of those. I have read other Grisham works and never liked those. I loved this book.
The most amazing part of this book is that it is written from the perspective of a 7 year old. This so reminds me of the fantastic 'A Christmas Story' which is told from the point of view of little Ralphie. Here Luke tells the story and it is one that grips the reader. His perspective on both the Mexicans, the Hill People, his family, his neighbors and the townsfolk is enlightening.
The story is simple yet expansive and really takes a person back to rural Arkansas in the 50s. From the troubles that come from Cotton farming to racial issues and poverty issues along with dreams of a better life this book is amazing. I can't recommend this high enough. The best work of Grisham in my view and this book stays on my bookshelf.
I always enjoy a good historical fiction that gets the historical setting right. There was one part, like in Taipan, that I had to go back and reread over and over because it was so good.
Most of us know and like Grisham due to his legal thrillers. Even those that are just occasional readers know of Grisham's genre bend; yet every now and again he chooses to dabble in other genres like sports (Playing for Pizza, and Calico Joe) and the (semi-autobiographical) slice of life, coming of age, drama novel that is this book, A Painted House.
Here, the reader follows one harrowing summer (of 1952) in the life of a seven-year-old farm boy, Luke Chandler. That summer was packed with epiphanous events: a potentially huge cotton harvest, where grandfather Pappy must hire two groups of migrant workers to help with the picking of cotton. Luke witnesses a murder by a migrant worker, a fatherless baby is born into a scandalized family, Luke witnesses a second murder, and the house in which they live is getting anonymously painted.
Inexplicably, Luke has become a focal point in the happenings of the novel. The writing is strong and svelte. (When the words of the narrative are first person and told from a seven-year-old perspective, they better be.) Luke's precocious, but when he asks questions, the reader gets to listen to the careful and misleading answers adults sometimes use to explain complex concepts to children.
This was a great read (IMHO) despite my expectation for the legal to take hold somewhere along the line. Still, sometimes it's a good thing / great thing to have expectations surpassed, altered, and ultimately expanded.
I seldom understood what Brother Akers was preaching about, and occasionally I'd hear Gran mumble over Sunday dinner that she'd also been hopelessly confused during one of his sermons. Ricky had once told me he thought the old man was half crazy. (PG 104)
This wasn't Grisham's usual political thriller but it was my kind of story. It's more in the category of a coming-of-age novel. We are taken back to the year 1952 in Arkansas during cotton picking time where we meet little seven-year-old Luke Chandler. The book was written in a way where the narrator was looking back at being seven not writing as a seven-year-old, and that makes a big difference to me because he seemed very mature (worldly?) in the book, and if you now any seven-year-olds you know that they are immature little know-it-alls, childish, and whiny.
It was a good yarn of a story especially since I know nothing about Arkansas or its background as a cotton picking state and what a difficult time the farmers have had throughout the years. I enjoyed how Grisham incorporated the Mexicans with their hard work and the small town vibes where everyone knows your business.
As a bonus to myself I also like to read how Grisham incorporates Christianity into his works ie. The Guardian. It's nice to read about characters that are sinners and full of flaws but try to be better in his stories.
I seldom give five stars; they must be earned by the author's offerings. This book supplied all the necessary plot ingredients to satisfy the curiosities of this avid, mature reader. (No desire to see the movie, it could not possibly do this story justice.) Its not for the squeamish or sheltered reading audience. A realistic slice of life, poor/destitute Arkansas folks during the early Fifties, well-described and believable.
"A Painted House" was my favorite of John Grisham's novels. Grisham's depictions of life in the '50s on a farm reminded me of one of my favorite authors, John Steinbeck. Grisham's prose is sparse but beautiful in this story, which involves a murder, but is mostly a coming-of-age story of the young protagonist.
I liked this book. There isn't any wild climatic events that you may find in other Grisham books. This is a simple novel of a simple life as told by a seven year old boy. Still, Grisham manages to capture the feelings of the times; a poor family in the south who hire workers to harvest their cotton and the drama that ensues with these "lower class" folk. I can see why a lot of Grisham fans wouldn't like this, it's a departure from his normal genre.
Such a well-written, engaging book. As the back cover suggests, A Painted House reminded me of books like To Kill a Mockingbird and Huck Finn. A boy from Arkansas (who loves the Cardinals and baseball and dreams of moving to St. Louis, all pluses in my book) grows up living the hard life on a cotton farm in the 50s. The book paints a vivid picture of what that common life might be like, with coming of age stories, family drama, and interpersonal conflicts, all while throwing in the less common intrigues of murders and a natural disaster. The relationships between ethnic groups, the role of the church, the pace of a 50s farm life, the ties of family, the importance of the paint on your house and its contrast to disasters, and finally the ambiguity of realized dreams... all highlights from a worthy one day read of 480 pages.
I'd never read a Grisham book before, but when I realized he wrote books that didn't involve lawyers, I decided to check this one out. Not disappointed. One of my favorite reads of the year.
This is not the usual John Grisham fare, but instead is a beautiful story told with great warmth and compassion. I have always enjoyed Grisham's books as good airplane reads--but never expected that he would write a book that I would list as one of my all-time favorites.
This book came to me very highly recommended. I had two friends who really really liked it and just knew I would love the story too. I suppose if it had been cleaned up a bit, I probably would have liked it more. The characters were engaging enough although the plot did seem to drag a little bit and left you feeling like the auther was searching for a plot in a rambling sort of way. I had a hard time with the language and violence; I'm a wouss I guess. I also couldn't get past the feeling that I was reading the thoughts of a teenage boy, not a seven-year-old. But I did finish it, because Grisham did a good job of making me really really want to see how it all turned out. So I will give that credit where it is due.
This is, so far as I know, Grisham's second or third departure from his legal thrillers. I have read several of his previous works and I found this novel to be a refreshing change, for the writer. Until that September of 1952, Luke Chandler had never kept a secret or told a single lie. But in the long, hot summer of his seventh year, two groups of migrant workers—and two very dangerous men—came through the Arkansas Delta to work the Chandler cotton farm. And suddenly mysteries are flooding Luke’s world. A brutal murder leaves the town seething in gossip and suspicion. A beautiful young woman ignites forbidden passions. A fatherless baby is born. And someone has begun furtively painting the bare clapboards of the Chandler farmhouse, slowly, painstakingly, bathing the run-down structure in gleaming white. And as young Luke watches the world around him, he unravels secrets that could shatter lives—and change his family and his town forever
I don't normally read Grisham, he's a great writer just not my typical genre. This, however, was an awesome story. I loved the whole experience of entering the world of Luke Chandler in 1951. It was a tremendously entertaining story. Well written, with so much detail and humor, realistic voices and a simpler time that was somehow made to be full of drama and suspense. I felt this was one of the best stories I can recall written from this era and brought so fully into focus.
Luke Chandler, 7 years old, lives in Black Oak Arkansas with his Mom and Dad, Gran and Pappy on a cotton farm. The cotton is their world. They are farmers, first and foremost and the cotton is their master. When the story begins, it is harvesting time. The summer crop has been good, the weather has been favorable and the Chandlers are occupied with the task of finding "hill people" and Mexicans to hire to help harvest the cotton. They will pay them to help pick the cotton and in return they will share their lives for the next two months. The decisions made at the beginning of the harvest turn out to have irrevocable consequences for the Chandlers, the Sprools- the "hill people', and the people of Black Oak. These decisions and their resulting effects are unspooled steadily and with increasing tension as the story progresses in a wonderfully mesmerizing tapestry, full of color and vibrancy. In essence, I was enthralled by this story. It was a journey to another place and time, one I was unfamiliar with, but was brought to feel right at home in. Read it, it's a pleasure.
This story told by Luke Chandler, the youngest member of the Chandler family. They were cotton farmers in Arkansas. They hired Mexicans and the Hill people from the Ozarks to pick their cotton.
The Hill people felt sorry for the Chandlers, since their brown wood house had never been painted. Tally with brother Trot bought white paint every week with their earnings. Trott started the painting while the rest of them were picking cotton.
Luke saw a lot of things that a little boy should not see and witness. Luke would hide from the grownups because he was a curious boy.
The burden of witnessing just got to much for him. He confided with his grandfather. Making a promise between them to tell no one else.
I read one review stating that the title of this book should have been "Watching Paint Dry". While it's not as exciting and riveting as Grisham's other works, and it took me about six chapters to get into the story, it was still an enjoyable book.
Set in 1952 Arkansas, 7-year-old Luke Chandler is forced to grow up quickly when he becomes exposed to several adult situations. It seems as though everyone in the story has a secret to keep and they all manage to confide in Luke.
The yearly ritual of hiring "Hill People" and Mexican aliens as temporary laborers on their cotton farm turns out to be a dangerous proposition this year. Luke is not pleased when the hill people set up camp in the front yard, right in the middle of his baseball diamond, but is even less pleased when one of them turns out to be a bully and is involved in a fatal fight in town one Saturday. Luke was unfortunate enough to be a witness and is torn between telling the truth or incurring the bully's wrath.
Luke also witnesses a brutal murder and the birth of an illegitimate baby, both turn out to be secrets he keeps and issues that cause him to wrestle with right vs. wrong. Throw in a schoolboy crush on a girl 10 years his senior and the constant worry about how the weather will affect the cotton crop this year, and you get a story with several different situations and angles.
Grisham's writing style is easy to read and very descriptive. Even though the plot didn't move too quickly, I still enjoyed this book and will continue reading Grisham's work.