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Go to My LibraryEl Jurado
- Language
- Spanish
- Published in
- Publisher
- EDB FICCION
- Pages
- 544
- ISBN
- 9788440664341
But as the trial gets underway, a strange pattern emerges. The jury begins to behave erratically, and it becomes clear that they are being manipulated from the inside by a mysterious juror and his confidante on the outside. This shadowy pair claims they can control the verdict and offer it to the highest bidder. In a game where the law can be bought and sold, the question is no longer who is right, but who is in control, and what their true motives are for hijacking one of the most important trials in American history.
Subjects
Original edition details
Other editions (43)
Other editions

Das Urteil.
2000 • Heyne Verlag
German

Das Urteil
1997 • Hoffmann & Campe
German

El Jurado
2002 • Ediciones B
Spanish

The Runaway Jury (UNABRIDGED, UNABRIDGED)
1996 • Recorded Books
English

The Runaway Jury
2003 • Arrow
English

The Runaway Jury (John Grisham)
1996 • Random House Audio
English

The Runaway Jury
1997 • Arrow
English

The Runaway Jury
2004 • Random House Audiobooks
English

The Runaway Jury (John Grisham)
1996 • Random House Audio
English

The Runaway Jury
1997 • Turtleback
English

The Runaway Jury (John Grisham)
1997 • Random House Audio
English

The Runaway Jury A gripping legal thriller from the Sunday Times bestselling author
2010 • Random House
English

The Runaway Jury
1996 • Century
English

The Runaway Jury
1997 • Ulverscroft Large Print Books
English

Runaway Jury Pack - Pg Tips Offer
1996 • Random House
English

In het geding
2004 • A.W. Bruna Uitgevers B.V.
Dutch

The Runaway Jury
2010 • Penguin Random House
English

The Runaway Jury A Novel
1996 • JG Publishing
English

The Runaway Jury
1996 • Doubleday
English

The Runaway Jury
1997 • Island Books
English

runaway jury
1991 • Yilin Press
Chinese

The Runaway Jury A Novel
2012 • National Geographic Books
English

The Runaway Jury A Novel
2010 • JG Publishing
English

The Runaway Jury A Novel
2006 • JG Publishing
English

The Runaway Jury
2008 • Pearson Education
English

Verdikt (Russian Edition)
2001 • AST
Russian

Tribunal en Fuga (El Jurado)
1996 • Ediciones B
English

El Ultimo Jurado
2004 • Ediciones B
Spanish

Juri Pilihan
1996 • Gramedia Pustaka Utama

El Jurado (Spanish Edition)
2001 • Suma de Letras
Spanish

JURADO - EL (Punto de Lectura) (Spanish Edition)
2000 • BYBLOS
Spanish

The Runaway Jury ('Shi kong de pei shen tuan', in traditional Chinese, NOT in English)
2000 • Zhi Ku

Das Urteil (German Edition)
2000 • Heyne
German

Le maitre du jeu
2001 • Robert Laffont
French

El Jurado (Spanish Edition)
2003 • Suma de Letras
Spanish

Jurado, El (Spanish Edition)
1998 • Ediciones B
Spanish

Le maître du jeu
1999 • Pocket
French

El Ultimo Jurado
2006 • Ediciones B
Spanish

Le maître du jeu
1999 • Robert Laffont
French

Runaway Jury M/au FL
1997 • Dell Publishing
English

Runaway Jury M/au FL
1997 • Dell Publishing
English

The Runaway Jury. (Lernmaterialien)
2001 • Langensch.-Hachette, M
English

Verdikt. Das Urteil.
2000 • Kurier der Zarin
Russian
Three blocks away, in a suite of opulent offices atop an old bank, the enemy is also working. Wendall Rohr, a flamboyant, bow-tied courtroom brawler, has assembled a consortium of the nation's wealthiest trial lawyers. They have pooled their millions to finance this assault, convinced they can finally breach the tobacco industry's impenetrable fortress. For decades, Big Tobacco has never paid a penny to a plaintiff, winning every case brought against it. But Rohr believes this time is different. He has the money to level the playing field, a hometown jury pool, and a righteous cause. He and his team pore over their own research, crafting their own models of the perfect juror, unaware that their greatest asset - or their greatest threat - sits quietly in the jury pool, waiting.
The trial begins in a packed courtroom under the stern eye of Judge Frederick Harkin. The jury selection is a tense, strategic battle. A blind man named Herman Grimes demands his right to serve, threatening a discrimination lawsuit and becoming the jury's first oddity. Day after day, the pool of citizens is whittled down by challenges from both sides, each team of lawyers and consultants trying to read the souls of strangers through their clothing, their answers, and the nervous twitch of a lip. Nicholas Easter survives each cut, a calm presence in khaki pants and a button-down shirt. He pays rapt attention but reveals nothing, his placid expression giving the experts on both sides fits. Finally, twelve jurors and three alternates are sworn in. Nicholas takes his seat on the front row, chair number two. The game is afoot.
It does not take long for Nicholas to assert his influence. When the jury's catered lunch fails to arrive on time, he calmly stages a revolt, confronting Judge Harkin at his own lunch table and securing for his colleagues a lavish meal at the town's finest restaurant. A few days later, he quietly orchestrates a spontaneous, unified recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance, a display of patriotism that stuns the courtroom into silence and signals to all that this is no ordinary jury. He is their leader, whether they know it yet or not. He whispers legal insights to his neighbor, Loreen Duke, and befriends the gambler, Jerry Fernandez, on a weekend fishing trip. He is slowly building a coalition, piece by piece, as the plaintiff's case unfolds.
From the outside, a woman named Marlee begins her own game. She contacts Fitch, first with a cryptic note slipped to him by a deputy. “Tomorrow, juror number two, Easter, will wear a gray pullover golf shirt with red trim,” it reads. When Nicholas appears precisely as described, Fitch is both enraged and intrigued. Marlee's calls continue, each one a taunt, a clue, a demonstration of her unnerving access to the jury room. She knows what they will do before they do it. She is his link to the inside, a phantom conspirator offering him a prize he has never before dared to imagine: a guaranteed verdict. Fitch unleashes his agents to find her, to uncover her past, but she is a ghost, always a step ahead, pulling his strings with masterful precision.
Inside the courtroom, Wendall Rohr builds a powerful case. The jury watches a video deposition of Jacob Wood, a gaunt, dying man speaking from his hospital bed about a life of addiction he could not conquer. World-renowned experts take the stand, displaying gruesome photos of blackened lungs and explaining in painstaking detail how the thousands of compounds in cigarette smoke ravage the human body. The trial's most devastating blow comes from Lawrence Krigler, a former Pynex engineer. He tells the jury of a secret, decades-old memo proving the industry knew nicotine was addictive and intentionally kept levels high to ensure their customers - many of them teenagers - would be hooked for life. “More nicotine meant more smokers,” he testifies, “which meant more sales and more profits.”
The pressure becomes unbearable. After a juror's apartment is broken into and another is followed on a weekend trip, Judge Harkin sequesters the jury, imprisoning them in a motel on the coast. Fitch's operations intensify. He orchestrates a sting to entrap the husband of a juror named Millie, hoping to blackmail her for her vote. He arranges for the company of another juror, Lonnie Shaver, to be bought out, securing his loyalty with the promise of a promotion. He uncovers a secret from juror Rikki Coleman's past - an abortion she had in college - and prepares to use it as leverage. His agents dig relentlessly into the pasts of Nicholas and Marlee, slowly tracing them from Biloxi to Allentown, Pennsylvania, to Broken Arrow, Oklahoma - other tobacco trials where they appeared under other names. They are professional jury-stalkers.
The negotiation between Marlee and Fitch culminates in a secret meeting. “Ten million,” she says, the price for a verdict. He scoffs, but he knows he will pay. The money is wired from The Fund to a bank in the Netherlands Antilles, into an account controlled by Fitch, to be held until the jury retires to deliberate. Once Marlee confirms the transfer, she will give the final signal to Nicholas. Fitch believes he has bought his victory, a stunning, unanimous defense verdict that will cripple the anti-tobacco movement for years. As his agents finally close in on Marlee's true identity, uncovering a past in Missouri, Fitch waits, confident that his money has secured his ninth and most important win.
The jury receives the case. In the deliberation room, Nicholas takes command. He steers the conversation away from simple liability - which they all agree on - to the magnitude of the punishment. When one juror suggests a few million in damages, Nicholas looks at them and says, “A billion.” The number hangs in the air, an impossible, breathtaking sum. But he is persuasive. This is their chance, he argues, to send a message that will echo for decades, to finally hold the industry accountable. One by one, he wins them over. The final verdict is nine to three for the plaintiff: two million in compensatory damages, and four hundred million in punitive damages. The courtroom is thrown into chaos. Rankin Fitch watches on a hidden camera, his world collapsing.
Weeks later, in a quiet diner in Washington, D.C., Marlee finds Fitch. She tells him the ten million dollars is being wired back to his account. She never intended to keep it; she only wanted to borrow it to short-sell tobacco stocks on the day of the verdict, a trade that made her and Nicholas a fortune. He knows now who she is - Gabrielle Brant, the only child of two parents who both died of lung cancer. “They died horrible deaths, Fitch,” she says, her voice cold and steady. “I watched them suffer and shrivel and gasp for breath.” Her four-year plot was not about money; it was about revenge. As she leaves him sitting alone, she delivers one final, chilling promise. “And remember, Fitch, next time you boys go to trial, we'll be there.”
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Rating Sources
The book is widely praised for its intensely suspenseful and original plot, offering an innovative look at the American legal system. Many readers found it to be a gripping, fast-paced page-turner that kept them engaged from beginning to end, often described as addictive and hard to put down. Reviewers appreciated the clever exploration of jury tampering and manipulation, with some noting how the author, an experienced lawyer, brings a sense of unsettling realism to the fictional account of behind-the-scenes legal tactics. The characters, particularly the well-developed villains and the protagonists who outsmart them, add to the enjoyment, creating a clear dynamic that makes it easy to root for certain outcomes. Overall, it is frequently called an excellent and entertaining legal thriller that delivers a satisfying reading experience.
Despite its strengths, the book draws significant criticism for its implausibility and far-fetched premise. Many readers found the central plot, involving the manipulation of the jury and the protagonists' elaborate scheme, to be ridiculously unrealistic and difficult to believe, stretching credibility too thin for a legal thriller. Some reviewers also felt the pacing was uneven, with sections, particularly those delving into the specifics of the trial's subject matter, becoming tedious or overly long, leading to a loss of interest in the middle. Another point of contention was the perceived lack of character depth and clear motivation for the main protagonists, making it challenging for some to feel invested in their journey or intentions until the very end. Additionally, the book's specific focus on a now-dated industry made it feel less relevant to some modern readers, with a few finding its cynical tone a bit overwhelming.
Ultimately, "The Runaway Jury" elicits a range of opinions, with some considering it a favorite John Grisham novel and others labeling it among his weakest. However, the general consensus points to an enjoyable and exciting read, particularly for those who appreciate the author's signature style. This book is highly recommended for readers who enjoy fast-paced legal thrillers, especially fans of John Grisham's earlier works. It appeals to those who can suspend disbelief and appreciate a dramatic, high-stakes narrative focused on themes of corporate power, legal corruption, and clever strategy. If you are looking for a captivating story that provides a thrilling escape, even if it stretches the bounds of reality, this book is likely to be a satisfying choice.
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