![]() ![]() However, the two stories are not related to each other and each one stands on its own as a separate case. ![]() In my opinion, it is more of a spiritual sequel than anything, using some of the same characters and geographic location. To be frank, this depends on how you define what a sequel is. To begin, I’d like to address the John Grisham fans out there who are wondering whether or not this is really a sequel to A Time to Kill. This rash act raises many questions and pulls Hubbard’s family, his maid and Jake Brigance himself into a very convoluted web of events where every answer gives birth to two new mysteries. Needless to say, that little piece of paper with words on it turns everything upside down, as he suddenly decided to leave virtually all of his fortune to his maid (who is black, which is important in this book’s context) rather than his own family. It wouldn’t all be so bad if it wasn’t for the new will he hastily left behind in his departure. This time around, Jack Brigance finds himself in the middle of a rather peculiar case, certainly no less strange than the last one.Įverything began when Seth Hubbard, a wealthy man dying from lung cancer, decided to hang himself on a sycamore tree. Sycamore Row is yet another legal thriller from John Grisham, and for this one we return to the courthouse in Clanton, previously seen in A Time to Kill. ![]()
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