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Purple Cane Road
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Title |
Purple Cane Road
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Authors and Contributors |
By (author) James Lee Burke
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Series | Dave Robicheaux |
Physical Properties |
Format:Paperback / softback | Pages:368 | Dimensions(mm): Height 200,Width 169 |
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Category/Genre | Crime and mystery |
ISBN/Barcode |
9780752843346
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Classifications | Dewey:813.54 |
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Audience | |
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Publishing Details |
Publisher |
Orion Publishing Co
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Imprint |
Orion (an Imprint of The Orion Publishing Group Ltd )
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Publication Date |
7 June 2001 |
Publication Country |
United Kingdom
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Description
When Detective Dave Robicheaux discovers disturbing secrets from his mother's past, he embarks on a journey through a murky world of vice, politics and murder. Robicheaux has been told that his mother, Mae, was a hooker and ended her life drowned in a mud puddle by two cops working for the Mob. As Robicheux and his partner hunt for the killers, they hook up with a door-to-door salesman turned state governor, a psychotic hit-man, and the owner of the mansion at Purple Cane Road - who knows rather too much about Robicheux's wife ...
Author Biography
James Lee Burke is the author of many previous novels, including twelve featuring Detective Dave Robicheaux. He lives with his wife, Pearl, in Missoula, Montana and New Iberia, Louisiana.
ReviewsJames Lee Burke is the heavyweight champ, a great American novelist whose work, taken individually or as a whole, is unsurpassed. * Michael Connelly * A gorgeous prose stylist. * Stephen King * Richly deserves to be described now as one of the finest crime writers America has ever produced. * Daily Mail * The gentle giant of US crime writers, Burke always ensures that his Louisiana detective Dave Robicheaux grapples with hot topics as much as with his own inner demons. * i newspaper * There are not many crime writers about whom one might invoke the name of Zola for comparison, but Burke is very much in that territory. His stamping ground is the Gulf coast, and one of the great strengths of his work has always been the atmospheric background of New Orleans and the bayous. His big, baggy novels are always about much more than the mechanics of the detective plot; his real subject, like the French master, is the human condition, seen in every situation of society. * Independent * The king of Southern noir. * Daily Mirror * His lyrical prose, his deep understanding of what makes people behave as they do, and his control of plot and pace are masterly. * Sunday Telegraph * No crime writer in America can hold a pen to Burke's mastery of style and powers of evocation and empathy; this is prose that cuts straight to the heart, summoning a wonderful parade of damaged humanity in its wake * Guardian * When it comes to literate, pungently characterised American crime writing, James Lee Burke has few peers. * Daily Express * Burke creates a landscape in which lovely and terrible things happen, with characters big enough never to be upstaged by the scenery. Potent, lyrical, inimitable * LITERARY REVIEW * 'When James Lee Burke writes, the little birdies sing, the sun comes out and old men learn to dance again. That's how good he is. And now he's back . . . Purple Cane Road may be the finest novel Burke has written' Independent on Sunday * INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY * It is difficult to think of new superlatives to describe Purple Cane Road: like all James Lee Burke's novels it has an intricate, but superbly machined plot, brilliantly imagined characters (with brilliantly imagined names), and is written in a language which, at once sharp yet poetic, can handle with nonchalant skill anything from extreme violence to languorous ease. But this must be the best of the series . . . Indeed, the book makes most other crime writing seem crude, simplistic and immature * EVENING STANDARD * James Lee Burke has created an extraordinarily vivid world: scary, bleak, full of eccentric low-lifes and devious, vengeful characters on the make . . . At times Burke's writing and atmosphere remind one of William Faulkner; at other moments Raymond Carver. I cannot think of much higher praise that can be accorded a novel * THE TIMES * Purple Cane Road, confirms him as the most skilful stylist currently writing in America . . . Once more, James Lee Burke goes from strength to strength; he's The Man * DAILY POST * Burke's effortless command of language and his understanding of turbulent emotions make his books, and this one in particular, both moving and painful. I can think of no other writer today who captures the American South with such eloquence and sympathy * SUNDAY TELEGRAPH * Purple Cane Road is not only a brilliant mystery, with an astonishing denouement, but a moving evocation of nostalgia and pain set in a marvellously described location * SCOTSMAN * Although nominally in the crime fiction genre, Lee Burke's novels transcend such a bracketing, being highly atmospheric slices of Southern Americana. Think Faulkner, with equal depth of character but clearer resolution of motive and plot * IRISH TIMES * Wonderful writing lifts this dark, grim tale to a lyrical hymn to the possibility of personal redemption * IRISH INDEPENDENT * PURPLE CANE ROAD is not only the best book of the year by a street, but also possibly the best he has written . . . Like all Burke's novels PURPLE CANE ROAD has an intricate plot, brilliantly imagined characters, and is written in a language which, at once sharp yet poetic, can handle anything from extreme violence to languorous ease * EVENING STANDARD *
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