I'm not sure how to rate this one. Therefore, I start at 5 stars (as always):
- 1 star: I don't think that the root problem is the death row. Frankly, I don't think that life imprisonment is much better than death penalty. Is it? Is living in a cage for the rest of one's life so much better than death? I'd think both are horrible perspectives.
- 1 star: For failing to point our the root problems. Of which I'd like to point out 2:
> The 1st root problem is the routine miscarriage of justice: the courts and the police and the investigation process should be done properly.
People just should not be put to prison basing on some tangential evidence, on hearsay, on absense of alibi, on statistical probabilities or likeliness, on judgement or any other such bullshit.
Police should either have good evidence or just not bother people with nonsence.
Conviction rates should not be a thing for everyone: this would exclude the motivation of running fool cases into the ground (literally, in some cases). As is, these drive forward even idiotic cases.
Courts should have the freedom to throw out as many cases as they need to.
Bullshit science should just be abolished: polygraphs and the like. While these are not used in court, these should not be used even in investigation. Seriously, what do they prove? That the person who you are asking about 'Did you kill such-and-such on the 2nd June?' is worried about this line of questioning and the possible interpretations of their reactions? Duh.
Most of the cases which have been overturned (and not just the case in this book), involve very loose interpretation of non-evidence and lots of incorectly applied judgement which should not have flied anywhere in the first place, had everyone been doing their respective jobs properly.
> The 2nd root problem is that the general standards of education are rather low and seem to be going down further. People generally seem to be not ready to live in the real world, where they might have to talk to police (being either suspects or witnesses) or work as police and respect other people's right to be free in case they did not commit any wrongdoings. As a result the society gets the double whammy of both police who skip a lot of edges and get wrong people in prison for crimes they did non commit and people who have little to no ability to defend themselves in case they are interviewed by the police. Who can be intimidated... yes, really, not even tortured into but just screamed into ... making BS confessions of crimes they did not commit.
People who have good education, really good one, who know their rights and their place in the world, who know they don't have to take blame, who can recognise the basic manipulation techniques are hard to intimidate and to manipulate. The opposite is the people who understand that 'truth doesn't matter', 'police will do whatever they want', 'I'm just a little man with no security in this world', 'I'll miss my morning work shift and will be fired and will live on the street' etc. They can be manipulated, intimidated, they will not know their rights or basic laws of the country they live in, they will not have access to good attorneys, they will even have trouble representing themselves in a sensible, guilt-free way just because they would be scared during the interview and therefore would not look convincing.
And the bingo is when these meet on the same case. Sad story, what can I say?
> There might also a 3d root problem (in some cases, likely). Which might be the jury trial. Whoever the fuck decided that random people who have little idea about anything involving law can make good decisions? People generally are spectacularly bad at making decisions. Using laymen jury turns the trials into a form of art which can get quite entertaining but which will never get fair and will always depend on jury liking or disliking some random stuff: hair of the defendant, speech of particular representatives... etc.
Anyway, I would have liked Mr Grisham to have addressed more than the 2-bit idea that the death penalty is bad and particularly so when the person is not guilty. Yeah, OK, what else is new?
- 1 star: Q: If a simple question about coffee took a full ten seconds, then one about church attendance might require an hour. (c) This might've actually applied to the whole book, I've felt there wan't enough ideas aroud for a whole novel. Frankly. I think all the preachery against the death row got really old by the middle of the book. Let alone the end.
+ 1 star: Love Grisham's style. So very clear-cut.
+ 1 star: Nice pacing. Lovely feeling of doom approaching.
+ 1 star: Love how most of wrong-doers got theirs coming: Kerber, Koffee. Would've loved more of that.
+- 0 stars: Nice to see Mr. Grisham being politically correct. *eyeroll* Cardboard politically correct. *eyeroll workout*
Will their ever be a novel with 2 Afroamericans, 1 crimedoer and 1 incorrectly blamed?
Or maybe 2 Chinese?
Or maybe 1 Norwegian expat (crimedoer) and 1 Russian (incorrectly blamed)?
Or... you get my drift :P
Overall: 5 stars even for all my harping.
Q:
Prisons are hate factories, Pastor, and society wants more and more of them. (c)
Q:
Kerber asked Donté to just imagine his mother, sitting in the witness room, waving at him for the last time, crying her eyes out, as they strapped him down and adjusted the chemicals. You’re a dead man, he said more than once. But there was an option. If Donté would come clean, tell them what happened, make a full confession, then he, Kerber, would guarantee that the state would not seek the death penalty. Donté would get life with no parole, which was no piece of cake, but at least he could write letters to his mom and see her twice a month.
Such threats of death and promises of leniency are unconstitutional, and the police know it. (с) How very nice.
Q:
But the truth was not important. (c) Well, it should be.