No one ever has or ever will do legal thrillers the way Grisham does, and as I have read every Grisham release to-date, for me this one was somewhere in the middle. In my opinion, his courtroom dramas are the best, and this book never sees the inside of a courthouse, so that lowered my overall rating a tad bit.
This book follows Lacy Stoltz, who readers met in "The Whistler" (although it is definitely not necessary to have read that one first). Lacy is an investigator for the Florida Board of Judicial Conduct, and when she is secretly approached by a woman who wants to file a complaint against a sitting judge for murdering upwards of eight people, her father included, Lacy is intrigued. The evidence is scant though, as the clues are all circumstantial, but the same method has been employed in every killing. Lacy somewhat reluctantly begins an investigation into the judge, who has a spotless record. The investigation changes abruptly when the judge is tipped off and starts an investigation of his own, and from there, a tricky cat-and-mouse game ensues.
This one is different in that there is never any question as to the killer, only as to how it would all end. I wouldn't call this a particularly fast-paced read, as it borderline bogged down in spots, i.e. the chapters about Lacey and her brother, Jeri and her daughter, etc., but it still held my interest all the way through. In true Grisham fashion, he provides much intriguing, and honestly frightening, facts about serial killers that I won't soon forget. I loved the fact that there are two strong female characters (it always surprises me how well Grisham writes women characters!). I have enjoyed Lacy's character in both books and hope she makes a return in a future Grisham book. The multiple POVs - the killer's included - worked well to explain the motives behind the killings and how he covered his tracks. The ending was not entirely surprising but not entirely predictable either - it was good but didn't blow me away.
Overall, I wish it had a few more courtroom scenes, but it is still a solid 4-star read!