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The Exchange–a kidnapping
The Exchange
by John Grisham
John Grisham’s second book, The Firm, was published in 1991. Two years later this legal thriller was made into a movie that guaranteed Grisham’s success. The Exchange is a sequel to The Firm revisiting lawyer Mitch McDeere and his wife Abby fifteen years after they escaped a very dishonest law firm that the FBI investigated. They bounced around a bit, and we meet up with them in New York City where Mitch has become a partner in Scully, a worldwide law firm with over a thousand lawyers.
Mitch is assigned an international case in which a Turkish construction company is trying to get Gaddafi to pay what he owes them for work on the Great Gaddafi Bridge in Libya which has become an embarrassment to Gaddafi because the predicted waters never arrived. It is essentially a bridge to nowhere.
The starting point for Mitch’s work is in Italy where an old friend Luca, who runs a branch of the law firm, convinces Mitch to bring his daughter Giovanna along on an exploratory visit to the bridge. Giovanna is a lawyer working for Scully’s firm in London. Unfortunately, Mitch ends up in the hospital with intestinal distress. Giovanna goes out to the bridge with a security team anyway, but is kidnapped.
The rest of the story details the convoluted multi-country effort to get Giovanna back safely. It involves politics, banks, and terrorists. The story was entertaining, and it was good to catch up with Mitch and Abby. It was not of the same caliber as The Firm and was not engaging enough to make me wish for a followup. I appreciated the way Grisham let the reader know the terrible things the terrorists did without sharing gruesome details. I was disappointed in the ending because there was closure for the characters without revealing the motivation of the villains. Mitch had an ethical decision to make in The Firm and again in The Exchange. I liked that he maintains his strong moral base, not caving to greed in either book.
I received a complimentary copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.
Rating: 4/5
Category: Mystery and Thriller, Fiction
Notes: 1. Although this is a sequel, it could be read as a standalone as Grisham provides enough information and really little is needed to enjoy the current plot.
2. Some swearing, no sex.
3. Unless you are a thriller aficionado, this probably would not make good bedtime reading.
Publication: October 17, 2023—Doubleday Books
Memorable Lines:
For thirty years he had waged war on behalf of cold-blooded killers who were guilty of crimes that often defied description. To survive, he had learned to take the crimes, put them in a box, and ignore them. The issue wasn’t guilt. The issue was giving the state, with its flaws, prejudices, and power to screw things up, the right to kill.
“This is the Great Gaddafi Bridge in central Libya, over an unnamed river yet to be found. It was and is a foolish idea because there are no people in the region and no one wants to go there. However, there is plenty of oil and maybe the bridge will get used after all. Lannak doesn’t really care. It’s not paid to plan Libya’s future. It signed a contract to build the bridge and held its end of the deal. Now our client wants to be paid”
The story itself was certainly newsworthy—an associate in the London office of the world’s largest law firm kidnapped by murderous thugs in Libya—but the scarcity of real facts did nothing to throttle the breathless headlines, photography, and speculation. If the facts were insufficient to carry a story, others were simply created on the fly.

In the first book of this series, Protocol, Maggie O’Malley gets drawn into a complicated and deadly abuse of power in her job as a pharmaceutical researcher. I assumed that in the second book in the series she would continue her work in the pharmaceutical industry. The author explains what happened: “Blame for the downturn was laid not only at the feet of the guilty but the person who had revealed their culpability. Coworkers stopped collaborating. Managers ‘forgot’ to invite her to meetings. Invitations to after-work drinks dried up and blew away with the prairie wind. It was The Great Corporate Freeze Out.”