I have read a lot of his books. Most of them have been good. The last one I bought was "Camino Winds". I have never been as disappointed in a book. I find it hard to even believe he wrote it.
I have read most of John Grisham's books and this one is one of his bests. Read with your hanky ladies.
It sounds like a great story, but I can't read sad stories anymore. It always reminds me of some tragedy in my life and flares up my PTSD. Can you give us a synopsis about it? I can handle that alright, but reading details and getting deep in the story usually has me not sleeping well for a few days.
I can't read sad books, either. If the description says, "Poignant", I don't read it. There is too much sadness nowadays to add more by reading sad stories.
I've read several ofchis books. Have two of them checked out now: The Appeal and Rouge Lawyer. Two older books.
I've read most of his books, but they are the same pattern after awhile with a few exceptions. The one non-fiction book, The Innocent Man was outstanding. I also read Dreams of Ada, on which this book was founded. What a terrible miscarriage of justice prevailed here. James Patterson became a predictable author as well. When they begin pumping out books so fast, they become boring.