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The litigators Cover Image CD audiobook CD audiobook

The litigators

Grisham, John. (Author). Boutsikaris, Dennis. (Added Author).

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780307941510
  • Physical Description: 5 sound discs (6 hours): digital ; 4 3/4 in.
    sound disc
    sound recording
  • Edition: 1st edition.
  • Publisher: New York : Random House, 2011.

Content descriptions

General Note:
[Abridged]
Compact disc.
The partners at Finley and Figg are really two-bit ambulance chasers who've been in the trenches much too long. With their new associate they are ready to tackle a really big case.
Participant or Performer Note: Read by Dennis Boutsikaris.
Subject: Products liability - Drugs -- Fiction
Chicago (Ill.) -- Fiction
Genre: Thriller.

Available copies

  • 4 of 4 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Fort Nelson Public Library.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 4 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Fort Nelson Public Library CDAUDIO MYSTERY GRI 701 (Text) 35246000738730 Audiobooks Volume hold Available -

  • AudioFile Reviews : AudioFile Reviews 2012 January
    John Grisham has the legal thriller down pat, and his audiobooks are often enhanced by the performance of narrator Dennis Boutsikaris. As he has done in other Grisham novels, Boutsikaris lends a touch of whimsy to the process that lets the listener know that everything is going to work out. He makes a good book even better. This story begins with a burned-out lawyer who jumps ship and seeks comfort in a boutique firm, only to become embroiled in a legal miasma. Worse, he is the only one who can save the day when slam-dunk litigation against a big drug company goes south. He has to put aside his courtroom na•vetŽ and battle the big boys to save his new firm. M.S. (c) AudioFile 2011, Portland, Maine
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2012 January
    Legal dreams and schemes

    John Grisham is such a good storyteller that it's easy to forget how much you can learn about law and justice, with all "its flaws and ambiguities," while listening to one of his legal thrillers. In The Litigators, performed with verve and nuanced care by Dennis Boutsikaris, he seamlessly embeds the ins and outs of mass tort litigation in a can-a-young-lawyer-leave-the-big-firm-and-make-it tale. The young lawyer is David Zinc, 32 and already burned out by the drudgery at his fancy, fast-track law office. After an alcohol-fueled day of soul-searching, he literally lands on the doorstep of Finley & Figg, a pair of ambulance-chasing, down-at-the-heels street lawyers always hoping for a big case to bail them out of boredom and near-bankruptcy. What unfolds thereafter, replete with David-and-Goliath encounters with corporations, evil and benevolent, and good courtroom drama, will have you rooting for the good guys, and a bit more legally savvy, too.

    THE ROCKY ROAD TO LOVE
    The Marriage Plot, Jeffrey Eugenides' highly anticipated new novel, is, despite much talk of post-modernism and deconstruction, a mostly traditional novel, with bountiful backstories, a love triangle and the coming-of-age, coming-apart, coming-to-your-senses gyrations implicit in its resolution. If Eugenides was wondering whether "the marriage plot," so successfully used by Jane Austen and Henry James, can be central in a 21st-century novel—he makes it clear that it can. He gives us a truly contemporary look at the vagaries of love and the need to find yourself before you can find your mate. The three participants in this romantic tangle are Mitchell Grammaticus, clever and intrigued by Christian mysticism, who loves beautiful, WASPy Madeleine, who in turn loves brilliant-but-bipolar Leonard. The book follows them as they bumble through the months after their graduation in 1982, making mistakes and a few feeble moves toward adulthood. Narrator David Pittu does a fine job delineating each character.

    TOP PICK IN AUDIO
    If you haven't made a literary resolution yet, please listen to Nathaniel Philbrick read his wonderfully entertaining, enlightening invitation to a great American classic, Why Read Moby-Dick. Yes, I too resisted it (a mild euphemism) in high school—but now, older and much wiser for Philbrick's brilliant explanation and easily understood exegesis of this whale of a book, I think I know why I didn't get it as a teenager, what I've missed and what wonders lie ahead in the reading. Wearing his scholarship lightly, Philbrick puts Moby-Dick's creation in the context of conflicted, pre-Civil War America; offers insights into Melville's life as a seaman, husband and author whose greatest book was ignored in his lifetime; and turns Melville's Moby-meanderings into fabulous finds for an attentive reader. But it's Philbrick's unflagging, infectious enthusiasm and love for both book and author that stays with you.

    Copyright 2012 BookPage Reviews.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2012 January #5

    When burnt-out lawyer David Zinc quits his job at a major corporate firm, a stress-induced nervous breakdown, heavy drinking, and the prospect of unemployment lead him to the doors of the seedy law firm of Finley & Figg and into the middle of a huge class action lawsuit against a pharmaceutical company that may be more than the partners at Finley & Figg can handle. Dennis Boutsikaris's narration is competent; he keeps the plot chugging along at an appropriate pace and shines in his portrayal of Zinc. He also effectively captures the over-the-top, ambulance-chasing banter of Zinc's new colleagues at the shady Finley & Figg. Yet when characters outside of Zinc's immediate orbit appear—particularly females and characters from varying ethnic backgrounds—the voices Boutsikaris creates begin to sound similar, amounting to some noticeable lost opportunities in a still enjoyable and highly entertaining audio. A Doubleday hardcover. (Oct.)

    [Page ]. Copyright 2012 PWxyz LLC
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