"Homecoming" returns us to Ford County, the made-up setting of large numbers of John Grisham's extraordinary stories. Jake Brigance is back, yet he's not in the court. He's called upon to help a close buddy, Mack Stafford, a previous attorney in Clanton, who three years sooner turned into a nearby legend when he took cash from his clients, separated from his significant other, sought financial protection, and left his family around midnight, at no point ever to be heard from in the future — as of not long ago.
Presently Mack is back, and he's inclining toward his old buddies, Jake and Harry Rex, to assist him with returning. His homecoming doesn't go as expected.
In "Strawberry Moon," we meet Cody Wallace, a youthful death row detainee just three hours from execution.
His legal counselors can't save him, the courts hammer the entryway, and the lead representative expresses no to a somewhat late solicitation for mercy. As the clock slows down, Cody has one last solicitation.
The "Fighting Partners" are the Malloy siblings, Kirk and Rusty, two effective youthful legal counselors who acquired a once prosperous firm when its organizer, their dad, was shipped off jail. Kirk and Rusty severely dislike one another, and address each other just when important.
As the firm breaks down, the subsequent disaster falls into the lap of Diantha Bradshaw, the main individual the accomplices trust. Might she at any point save the Malloys, or does she stand firm without precedent for her vocation and attempt to save herself?
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