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In the town of Batesville they passed a fast-food place that advertised chicken biscuits and twenty-four-hour service. Leon turned around. "I could use the ladies' room," Inez said. There were no other customers inside at 3:15 in the morning. Butch rolled his mother to a table near the front, and they ate in silence. The van with Raymond's coffin was less than thirty feet away.
Inez managed a few bites, then lost her appetite. Butch and Leon ate like refugees.
They entered Ford County just after 5:00 a.m., and it was still very dark, the roads empty. They drove to Pleasant Ridge in the north end of the county, to a small Pentecostal church where they parked in the gravel lot, and waited. At the first hint of sunlight, they heard an engine start somewhere in the distance.
"Wait here," Leon said to Butch, then left the van and disappeared. Behind the church there was a cemetery, and at the far end of it a backhoe had just begun digging the grave. The backhoe was owned by a cousin's boss. At 6:30, several men from the church arrived and went to the grave site. Leon drove the van down a dirt trail and stopped near the backhoe, which had finished its digging and was now just waiting. The men pulled the coffin from the van. Butch and Leon gently placed their mother's wheelchair on the ground and pushed her as they followed the coffin.
They lowered it with ropes, and when it settled onto the four-by-four studs at the bottom, they withdrew the ropes. The preacher read a short verse of Scripture, then said a prayer. Leon and Butch shoveled some dirt onto the coffin, then thanked the men for their assistance.
As they drove away, the backhoe was refilling the grave.
The house was empty-no concerned neighbors waiting, no relatives there to mourn. They unloaded Inez and rolled her into the house and into her bedroom. She was soon fast asleep. The four boxes were placed in a storage shed, where their contents would weather and fade along with the memories of Raymond.
It was decided that Butch would stay home that day to care for Inez, and to ward off the reporters. There had been many calls in the past week, and someone was bound to show up with a camera. He worked at a sawmill, and his boss would understand.
Leon drove to Clanton and stopped on the edge of town to fill up with gas. At 8:00 a.m. sharp he pulled in to the lot at McBride Upholstery and returned the van. An employee explained that Mr. McBride wasn't in yet, was probably still at the coffee shop, and usually got to work around 9:00. Leon handed over the keys, thanked the employee, and left.
He drove to the lamp factory east of town, and punched the clock at 8:30, as always.
From the book FORD COUNTY by John Grisham, published by Doubleday a division of Random House, Inc. Reprinted with permission.
Just when you think John Grisham couldn’t get any better, he does something not only fantastic, but totally new. Fans of the #1 New York Times phenom will be thrilled to know that in Ford County, he returns to the setting for his immensely popular first novel, A Time to Kill, with a collection of stories that remind us why he is America’s favorite teller of tales.
The page turning begins with “Blood Drive,” where a gathering of neighbors fear for young Bailey, who’s in a hospital in Memphis and in need of blood after taking a tumble at a construction site. That’s when three unreliable “friends” set off to be heroes, with some laugh-out-loud results. In “Fetching Raymond,” a mother of three sons, who have spent more time in prison than out, is faced with the possibility that her youngest boy’s current stay may be coming to the horrifying end she’d never believed possible.
Whether it’s the tale of a hard-luck lawyer who gets the case that can change his life—only to find out it comes with major collateral damage—or the story of a local swindler who finally gets his comeuppance, Grisham’s return to Ford County is delayed gratification that’s been well worth the wait.
Hardcover: 320 pages
Publisher: Doubleday Broadway Pub ( November 03, 2009 )
Item #: 14-0422
ISBN: 9780385532457
Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 8.25 x 0.76 inches
Product Weight: 12.0 ounces

I love Jphn Grisham's writing, but these stories lacked the luster that is usually a part of Grisham. It is like he leads you up to a crest and then leaves you hanging. Several stories were interesting but then they just stop and leave you wondering if someone tore the next page out of your book.
Reviewer: Judith
I have read and loved every John Grisham book...except this one. A few of the stories were good but not impressed over all.
Reviewer: Mindi
I loved the book! Each story, although short, told an interesting story that efficiently described the principle characters. I was drawn in by each story and loved reading the series of short stores, all based in Clanton, MS. I now feel like I know the town, the people, and how they think and what they value. Thanks Grisham, I look forward to more.
Reviewer: Ltinaz
I have only read half of the stories in this book and I will be finishing it but these stories are poorly written. Each story starts off fine but then it's like he realizes he's writing a short story and not a novel and just throws together an ending. John Grisham needs to stick to novels and leave the short stories to Stephen King.
Reviewer: Deb
Not at all what I have come to expect from John Grisham. Wish I had never bought this one, don't even want to share it.
Reviewer: Kim