![[John Grisham]](../images/mdauthor.gif)
When the tour buses stopped at the end of John Grisham's driveway in Oxford, Mississippi, he knew it was time to move. The Grishams are now happily settled in Virginia in a house that's not quite as accessible to his legions of readers and fans. They have a quiet life -- Grisham is never seen at Hollywood openings or New York book parties. For that matter, he rarely gives interviews.
But when Jesse Kornbluth, editor of The Book Report, sent him twenty questions, he promptly shot back twenty pointed answers.
We are delighted to present John Grisham's only interview before his new novel reaches bookstores on February 26th.
Book Report: You've said that your mother didn't believe in television
and that you grew up reading books. Which books were most memorable? Did
other kids tease you for being a bookworm -- or did your athletic ability
eliminate those taunts?
John Grisham: I was never a bookworm. I remember reading Dr. Seuss,
the Hardy Boys, Emil and the Detectives, Chip Hilton, and lots of Mark
Twain and Dickens. My athletic ability did nothing but invite taunts. I
was an indifferent student and an athlete with delusions of adequacy, dreams
of adulation.
Book Report: All through high school and into college, you seem to
have been more committed to dreams of a professional baseball career than
your studies. You've said that changed watching a ball game. How so?
John Grisham: I was drifting through college, and one night I sat alone
and watched a game between Mississippi State and some forgotten opponent.
It dawned on me that the players I was watching, though my age, also had
a very slight chance of playing pro ball. I decided we were in the same
boat. And it was best to start studying for a change.
Book Report: In your years as a lawyer, what was most satisfying
about the law?
John Grisham: Getting out of it.
Book Report: Richard North Patterson told me that writing briefs
for judges -- "the most bored and jaded audience in the world"
-- was great training for writing legal fiction. How helpful was your legal
training?
John Grisham: Crucial. I seriously doubt I would ever have written the
first story had I not been a lawyer. I never dreamed of being a writer.
I wrote only after witnessing a trial.
Book Report: You woke up at 5 AM for three years to write A Time
to Kill, then went to work --- 60 to 80 hours a week -- as a State
Representative. You really considered writing "a hobby?"
John Grisham: Yes, very much so. I would write for an hour or so each
morning, then start to work. My goal was simply to finish the first manuscript.
It was only a hobby, a very secret one.
Book Report: You have a close editorial collaboration with your wife.
How does that work?
John Grisham: I constantly inundate Renee with all sorts of story ideas,
and it's her job to tell me to shut up and keep searching. She has an uncanny
ability to spot a good story; I tend to think that almost anything will
work. Once I start writing, she is merciless as the chapters pour forth.
She enjoys picking a good brawl over a subplot, a weak character, an unnecessary
scene. I accuse her of looking for trouble -- and, inevitably, I return
to the typewriter and fix whatever troubles her.
Book Report: What have you learned from reviews of your books?
John Grisham: I have learned not to read reviews. Period. And I hate
reviewers. All of them, or at least all but two or three. Life is much
simpler ignoring reviews and the nasty people who write them. Critics should
find meaningful work.
Book Report: You've said you read Steinbeck in school. Because you
increasingly write about social issues, you're sometimes compared now to
Dickens. What writers do you read, and who are your influences?
John Grisham: I still read Steinbeck, Dickens and Twain. I'm not sure
anyone has influenced my style, but if I could emulate anyone it would
be Steinbeck.
Book Report: If you get ideas from contemporary events or issues,
what case inspired The Partner?
John Grisham: None. The Partner is an old story. Lawyers dream
of escaping, preferably with the money. I've known several who tried it.
Book Report: In April, 1993, you and fellow members of the First
Baptist Church in Oxford went to Brazil and built houses for the poor --
did you draw on that experience for the Brazil part of The Partner?
John Grisham: I love Brazil, and I go there often. I've been several
times with church groups, and our mission each trip is to build a small
chapel for a local congregation, and also to provide medical care to the
sick. It's always satisfying. Of course, it provides a rich landscape for
the fiction.
Book Report: Forgive the over-simplification, but your previous novels
tend to explore David vs. Goliath themes, on the order of that Texas Rangers
motto, "Little man whip a big man every time if the little man is
in the right and keeps on coming." Your lawyer-fugitive in The
Partner seems outside of that pattern. He strikes me as the ultimate
realist -- he plays the system against itself (as you write, "It was
the legal system protecting its own.") Is this an isolated plot point
in a single novel, or does it suggest a change in your views about the
legal system?
John Grisham: No change; it's just the plot for this novel. I prefer
to tackle issues -- death penalty, tobacco litigation, insurance abuse,
etc. -- but it's not always possible every time out.
Book Report: In The Partner, you write, "Everyone wants
to run away...At some point in life, everyone thinks about running away."
That's a succinct motivation for your main character. Is that also your
wish -- to be rid of the burden of celebrity and the need to isolate yourself
from a too-adoring public?
John Grisham: I wanted to run away from the law, but not like my main
character. I have a wonderful wife, great kids, a great family. My desire
was to make a quick fortune (a typical lawyer's dream) and run away from
the profession. Now, though, I'm very content. I can hide from the fame
and the public can't find me.
Book Report: You've been publishing novels with remarkable regularity.
The pressure on you -- from readers and publishers and film studios --
to continue writing legal thrillers must be immense. How do you do it,
year after year? Do you have plans to branch out and try other forms, even
at the risk of being less "successful?"
John Grisham: There's no pressure. I write six months a year. I find
my story, find its voice, its people, its pace, and I retreat into my attic
for six hours a day and shut out everything but family. As I write, I don't
think about the readers, the sales, the movies. I think about the story.
If I get it right, everything else falls into place. One day, and I don't
know when, I'll write other types of books. But not in the near future.
I'd be foolish to abandon this genre at this time.
Book Report: In the Oxford American, you indicted Hollywood
-- well, Oliver Stone, anyway -- for moral blindness. I've read that you
wrote an original screenplay about a lawyer and a seductress called "The
Gingerbread Man." Did you find your anti-smut, anti-violence principles
challenged by this experience?
John Grisham: "The Gingerbread Man" is my first, and probably
only, original screenplay, and nothing was compromised. It's as mild as
your average prime-time TV, something I know nothing about. The Oliver
Stone controversy -- that would take pages.
Book Report: You've said, "Bill Clinton and I may be distantly
related." Does that preclude you from commenting on the Paula Jones
lawsuit?
John Grisham: Yes.
Book Report: As a Little League coach, how would you characterize
yourself? Do you play everyone at the expense of winning? How do you deflect
the win-at-all-cost or put-my-kid-in advice you get from other parents?
John Grisham: Every kid plays in every game. In fact, our league has
a mandatory play rule, and all the coaches support it. I don't know much
about winning. I've coached my son for seven years now, and my career winning
percentage is .474. I ignore parents. If they gripe and complain, I invite
them to take their precious bundle elsewhere.
Book Report: Last year you described A Time to Kill as your
favorite of your books. Still think so?
John Grisham: Yes.
Book Report: In 1990, you said, "I'd like to do what Faulkner
did --- carve out a little piece of Mississippi territory and claim it
as my own." With The Partner, you've gone international. Are
you finished with books about your home region?
John Grisham: For now. Maybe when I'm sixty, I'll go back to Ford County
and write stories, but not now.
Book Report: You tried a case last year. Think you'll do it again?
John Grisham: We won, and I was thrilled to leave the courtroom. I cannot
see myself returning. Trial work is quite stressful when you do it every
day, and I had not seen a courtroom in eight years. Never say never ---
but never again.
Book Report: Last question -- and the one that everyone wants answered:
You really shave only on Sunday?
John Grisham: Yes, every Sunday, just before church.
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©1995 Capitola Book Café
<bookcafe@cruzio.com>
last updated: February 15, 1996
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