The novel sold 7 million copies and the movie starred Tom Cruise. The film grossed over $158 million domestically and $111 million internationally. Additionally, it was the largest grossing R-rated movie of 1993 and of any film based on a Grisham novel. The film was released while Grisham was at the height of his popularity. That week, Grisham and Michael Crichton evenly divided the top six paperback spots on The New York Times Best Seller list. Abby McDeere is described as the "blue-blood wife" by Mike Hale of The New York Times. She earned her degree in elementary education at Western Kentucky and then taught at a private kindergarten in Boston, while Mitch, her high school sweetheart, attended Harvard Law School. After she and Mitch graduated from college, they married. At the time of the novel, her parents resided in Kentucky, which she regarded as her home. Her family did not like Mitch and boycotted their wedding. In "Chapter Seven" of the television version, she says that her parents were both born in Danesborough, Kentucky. She follows Mitch to Memphis, Tennessee after he signs on with Bendini, Lambert & Locke, a small tax firm. She is initially intrigued by their new-found affluence—a low-interest mortgage on a house, a Mercedes, and a salary far more than what Mitch was offered in New York and Chicago. She takes a job teaching third grade at an exclusive private school in Memphis. Her dreams come undone, however, when Mitch tells her that his firm is part and parcel of a massive money laundering and tax fraud operation operated by a Mafia family. She works with Mitch to bring down the firm, even feigning that she and Mitch have separated so she can slip out of Memphis and help copy documents for the FBI without attracting suspicion.
Critical review
Film
Joe Brown of The Washington Post described Tripplehorn's performance as the increasingly suspicious, resenting and brooding Abby as "...a welcomely elegant and alert presence." Todd McCarthy of Variety says that the film role expands upon the character in the book with "an added mission that creates some extra suspense and pathos". He described her performance glowingly: "At times uncannily resembling Genevieve Bujold, Tripplehorn gets to do a bit more than hold down the home front and express doubt and fury at her husband's long hours." Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly notes that Abby "has worldlier intuitions than he does", while Empire's Matt Mueller describes her as Mitch's "more intuitive, earthy wife". Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times says that one late scene between Gene Hackman and Tripplehorn "...is like a master class in acting."
Television
The Hollywood ReporterTim Goodman describes Parker's portrayal as dutiful. Los Angeles Timestelevision criticMary McNamara describes Parker's role as thin, saying she "...is given less than nothing to do save offer her husband contradictory pep talks..." Mike Hale of The New York Times also claims that Parker is "stranded in a part that looks like a drag so far" in his early take on her role.