The boys from Biloxi

John Grisham

Large print - 2022

Keith Rudy and Hugh Malco grew up in Biloxi in the 1960s and were childhood friends. But as teenagers, their lives took them in different directions. Keith's father became a legendary prosecutor, and Hugh's father became the "Boss" of Biloxi's criminal underground. Keith went to law school and followed in his father's footsteps. Hugh preferred the nightlife and worked in his father's clubs. The two families were headed for a showdown, one that would happen in a courtroom.

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LARGE PRINT/FICTION/Grisham, John
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Subjects
Genres
Thrillers (Fiction)
Legal fiction (Literature)
Novels
Published
New York : Random House Large Print [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
John Grisham (author)
Edition
First large print edition
Physical Description
607 pages (large print) ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780593669914
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Keith Rudy and Hugh Malco were born a month apart in Biloxi, Mississippi, in the 1960s. They were best friends who played baseball together, and they might have remained close were it not for their fathers: Hugh's dad wound up being a big man in Biloxi's thriving organized crime world; Keith's father, on the other hand, was a crusading anti-crime prosecutor. As sons will do, each followed in his father's footsteps. Now, a tragedy sets the two men on a direct collision course, and nothing, not even a friendship that once was, will stop the war that is coming. Naturally, Grisham's latest is a legal thriller, complete with a riveting courtroom showdown, but it's also much more than that. It's a family saga reminiscent of Jeffrey Archer and Dennis Lehane, and in its exploration of the gray area between absolute right and absolute wrong, it frequently has the feel of a Don Winslow novel. Grisham has created some of his most memorable characters here (the supporting cast is especially rich and meaty), and readers will very quickly find themselves completely invested in the story and the lives of everyone who inhabits it. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Grisham's legions will follow him anywhere, but they will be especially thrilled to find him at the top of his game this time.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

Best-seller Grisham (The Judge's List) returns with another character-driven thriller. Grisham begins his novel with a fascinating history of Eastern European immigrants, mostly Croatian, who settled in Biloxi, MS. Lance Malco, a second-generation immigrant, opens a string of clubs on a strip that offers illegal gambling, prostitution, and watered-down liquor, while his friend Jesse Rudy becomes a lawyer. Lance and Jesse's sons Hugh and Keith become inseparable friends and admired stars of the Biloxi high school baseball team, although their paths diverge after graduation. Hugh ends up working for his father's illegal gambling and prostitution syndicate, while Keith becomes a lawyer like his father. When Jesse is elected as Biloxi's district attorney and is tasked with cleaning up Lance's illegal clubs, the two families' paths collide in a devastating way. Narrator Michael Beck's spot-on pacing keeps the narrative moving through the courtroom drama that follows as well as when describing the tensions between family and friends. Listeners will appreciate Beck's Southern accent, which adds to the atmosphere of this gripping story. VERDICT Fans of Grisham will enjoy this compelling mystery that delves into Biloxi's gritty side and ends with a poignant twist.--Ilka Gordon

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Friends turn foes in this Mississippi mix of courtroom and crime. In 1960, 12-year-olds Keith Rudy and Hugh Malco are Little League fast-balling all stars and great friends in the Gulf Coast city of Biloxi, Mississippi. They'd love to make it to the big leagues one day, but alas, this story isn't Field of Dreams. The lads' lives diverge dramatically: Keith studies hard at Ole Miss, becomes an attorney, and sets up a law practice, while Hugh thrives in a seedy underworld of strip joints, honky-tonks, prostitution, and "unchecked vice" along "the poor man's Riviera." The Category 5 Hurricane Camille flattens Biloxi in 1969 and gives Keith many clients from cheated insurance policyholders. Unfortunately, Camille doesn't clean up the local underworld so much as rearrange it. So Keith decides to run for district attorney and put criminals behind bars. At first, corrupt county sheriff Fats Bowman isn't worried. "Need I remind you," he tells his gang, "that the graveyard is full of politicians who promised to clean up the Coast?" But he and Hugh soon feel the heat from Keith, and they fight back hard. Plenty of murders stoke the story's engine, naturally leading to courthouse scenes where the author excels. But how far will Hugh Malco go to keep Biloxi dirty and profitable? He wouldn't try to hurt his old pal, would he? This is a multigenerational tale also starring Keith's and Hugh's fathers, Jesse and Lance. Perhaps because the novel spans decades, a lot of material feels like summary--readers quickly learn that many residents are of Croatian descent, and there are barely enough mentions of Black people to acknowledge their existence. The interpersonal dynamics make the story, because attentive readers will suss where the plot is going from a country mile away. For one thing, it's a straight line save for one humongous surprise. But the author is always an engaging storyteller even when he could add another twist or two. Not vintage Grisham but still a worthy yarn. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1 A hundred years ago, Biloxi was a bustling resort and fishing community on the Gulf Coast. Some of its 12,000 people worked in shipbuilding, some in the hotels and restaurants, but for the majority their livelihoods came from the ocean and its bountiful supply of seafood. The workers were immigrants from Eastern Europe, most from Croatia where their ancestors had fished for centuries in the Adriatic Sea. The men worked the schooners and trawlers harvesting seafood in the Gulf while the women and children shucked oysters and packed shrimp for ten cents an hour. There were forty canneries side by side in an area known as the Back Bay. In 1925, Biloxi shipped twenty million tons of seafood to the rest of the country. Demand was so great, and the supply so plentiful, that by then the city could boast of being the "Seafood Capital of the World." The immigrants lived in either barracks or shotgun houses on Point Cadet, a peninsula on the eastern edge of Biloxi, around the corner from the beaches of the Gulf. Their parents and grandparents were Poles, Hungarians, Czechs, as well as Croatians, and they had been quick to assimilate into the ways of their new country. The children learned English, taught it to their parents, and rarely spoke the mother tongues at home. Most of their surnames had been unpronounceable to customs officials and had been modified and Americanized at the Port of New Orleans and Ellis Island. In Biloxi cemeteries, there were tombstones with names like Jurkovich, Horvat, Conovich, Kasich, Rodak, Babbich, and Peranich. They were scattered about and mixed with those of Smith, Brown, O'Keefe, Mattina, and Bellande. The immigrants were naturally clannish and self-protective, but by the second generation they were intermarrying with the early French families and all manner of Anglos. Prohibition was still the law, and throughout the Deep South most Baptists and Methodists righteously pursued the dry life. Along the Coast, though, those of European descent and Catholic persuasion took a dimmer view of abstinence. In fact, Biloxi was never dry, regardless of the Eighteenth Amendment. When Prohibition swept the country in 1920 Biloxi hardly noticed. Its bars, dives, honky-tonks, neighborhood pubs, and upscale clubs not only remained open but thrived. Speakeasies were not necessary because booze was so prevalent and no one, especially the police, cared. Biloxi became a popular destination for parched Southerners. Add the allure of the beaches, delicious seafood, a temperate climate, and nice hotels, and tourism flourished. A hundred years ago the Gulf Coast became known as "the poor man's Riviera." As always, unchecked vice proved contagious. Gambling joined drinking as the more popular illegal activities. Makeshift casinos sprang up in bars and clubs. Poker, blackjack, and dice games were in plain view and could be found everywhere. In the lobbies of the fashionable hotels there were rows of slot machines operating in blatant disregard for the law. Brothels had been around forever but kept undercover. Not so in Biloxi. They were plentiful and serviced not only their faithful johns but police and politicians as well. Many were in the same buildings as bars and gambling tables so that a young man looking for pleasure need only one stop. Though not flaunted as widely as sex and booze, drugs like marijuana and heroin were easy to find, especially in the music halls and lounges. Journalists often found it difficult to believe that such illegal activity was so openly accepted in a state so religiously conservative. They wrote articles about the wild and freewheeling ways in Biloxi, but nothing changed. No one with authority seemed to care. The prevailing mood was simply: "That's just the Biloxi." Crusading politicians railed against the crime and preachers thundered from the pulpits, but there was never a serious effort to "clean up the Coast." The biggest obstacle facing any attempts at reform was the longtime corruption of the police and elected officials. The cops and deputies worked for meager salaries and were more than willing to take the cash and look the other way. The local politicians were easily bought off and prospered nicely. Everyone was making money, everyone was having fun, why ruin a good thing? No one forced the drinkers and gamblers to venture into Biloxi. If they didn't like the vice there, they could stay home or go to New Orleans. But if they chose to spend their money in Biloxi, they knew they would not be bothered by the police. Criminal activity got a major boost in 1941 when the military built a large training base on land that was once the Biloxi Country Club. It was named Keesler Army Airfield, after a World War I hero from Mississippi, and the name soon became synonymous with bad behavior from tens of thousands of soldiers getting ready for war. The number of bars, casinos, brothels, and striptease joints increased dramatically. As did crime. The police were flooded with complaints from soldiers: rigged slots, floating roulette, cheating dealers, spiked drinks, and sticky-fingered prostitutes. Since the owners were making money they complained little, but there were plenty of fights, assaults on their girls, and broken windows and whiskey bottles. As always, the police protected the ones who paid them, and the jailhouse doors revolved with GIs. Over half a million of them passed through Keesler on their way to Europe and Japan, and later Korea and Vietnam. Biloxi vice was so profitable that it naturally attracted the usual assortment of characters from the underworld: career criminals, outlaws, bootleggers, smugglers, rumrunners, con men, hit men, pimps, leg-breakers, and a more ambitious class of crime lords. In the late 1950s, a branch of a loose-knit gang of violent thugs nicknamed the Dixie Mafia settled in Biloxi with plans to establish their turf and take over a share of the vice. Before the Dixie Mafia, there had always been jealousy among the club owners, but they were making money and life was good. There was a killing every now and then and the usual intimidation, but no serious efforts by one group to take over. Other than ambition and violence, the Dixie Mafia had little in common with the real Cosa Nostra. It was not a family, thus there was little loyalty. Its members--and the FBI was never certain who was a member, who was not, and how many claimed to be--were a loose assortment of bad boys and misfits who preferred crime over honest work. There was no established organization or hierarchy. No don at the top and leg-breakers at the bottom, with mid-level thugs in between. With time, one club owner managed to consolidate his holdings and assume more influence. He became "the Boss." What the Dixie Mafia had was a propensity for violence that often stunned the FBI. Through its history, as it evolved and made its way south to the Coast, it left behind an astonishing number of dead bodies, and virtually none of the murders were ever solved. It operated with only one rule, one hard-and-fast, cast-in-stone blood oath: "Thou shalt not snitch to the cops." Those who did were either found in ditches or not found at all. Certain shrimp boats were rumored to unload weighted corpses twenty miles from shore, into the deep, warm waters of the Mississippi Sound. In spite of its reputation for lawlessness, crime in Biloxi was kept under control by the owners and watched closely by the police. With time, the vice became roughly concentrated into one principal section of town, a one-mile stretch of Highway 90, along the beach. "The Strip" was lined with casinos, bars, and brothels, and was easily ignored by the law-abiding citizens. Life away from it was normal and safe. If one wanted trouble, it was easy to find. Otherwise, it was easy to avoid. Biloxi prospered because of seafood, shipbuilding, tourism, construction, and a formidable work ethic fueled by immigrants and their dreams of a better life. The city built schools, hospitals, churches, highways, bridges, seawalls, parks, recreational facilities, and anything else it needed to improve the lives of its people. Excerpted from The Boys from Biloxi: A Legal Thriller by John Grisham All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.