47 pages • 1 hour read
John GrishamA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
In Camino Island, John Grisham explores the myths and realities of being a writer. Through Mercer’s professional struggles, her conversations with other writers, and the advice of Bruce and others, Grisham shows readers the decisions, compromises, and pains of the writing life.
Grisham highlights several ways that writers support themselves when writing itself doesn’t provide enough income. One of the most common is teaching. At the beginning of the novel, when Elaine first approaches her, Mercer is teaching as an adjunct instructor. Teaching as an adjunct is a job that offers no security, which is why she finds Elaine’s offer so appealing. At the end of the novel, she is a resident writer at a university, an appointment that involves teaching classes on a guest basis. These positions are often available at schools and, while more prestigious than being an adjunct professor, are also only temporary. The main complaint that Mercer, as a writer, has about these positions is their demand on her time; as she puts it, “she was a writer, not a teacher, and it was time to move on. To where, she wasn’t certain, but after three years in the classroom she longed for the freedom of facing each day with nothing to do but write her novels and stories” (83).
By John Grisham
A Painted House
John Grisham
A Time For Mercy
John Grisham
A Time to Kill
John Grisham
Bleachers
John Grisham
Calico Joe
John Grisham
Gray Mountain
John Grisham
Playing For Pizza
John Grisham
Skipping Christmas
John Grisham
Sooley
John Grisham
Sparring Partners
John Grisham
Sycamore Row
John Grisham
The Appeal
John Grisham
The Boys from Biloxi
John Grisham
The Brethren
John Grisham
The Chamber
John Grisham
The Client
John Grisham
The Confession
John Grisham
The Firm
John Grisham
The Guardians
John Grisham
The Innocent Man
John Grisham