When a beautiful teenage girl is killed, New Iberia police detective Dave Robicheaux senses that the most likely suspect, Tee Bobby Hulin, is not the actual killer. Though a drug addict and general neer-do-well, Hulin just doesn't fit the profile for this kind of crime. He's a Cajun blues singer (one of his songs is titled "Jolie Blon's Bounce"), and he's been raised by his grandmother Ladice Hulin, a proud and strong-willed black woman.
But when there's another, similar murder—this victim a drugged-out prostitute who happens to be the daughter of one of the local mafia bigwigs—the cries for an arrest become too loud to ignore. The mafia figure, however, prefers to take matters in his own hand and sets out to find—and punish—the killer himself. Once again, Tee Bobby Hulin seems the most likely suspect.
Added to the mix of characters on the good guy side of the balance sheet is Clete Purcel, a long-time buddy of Robicheaux's and a confirmed boozer and womanizer. Coming to New Iberia for a visit, Clete is quickly drawn into the struggle between the various forces of evil in the town: Jimmy Dean Styles, a black man intent on maintaining his empire of corruption; Joe Zeroski, a trailer-park mafioso with palatial aspirations—and of course Legion Guidrey, the devil incarnate.
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Release date
June 4, 2002 -
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780743244626
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- ISBN: 9780743244626
- File size: 1707 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
Starred review from April 22, 2002
To read a Burke novel is to enter a timeless, parallel universe of violent emotions and lush, brooding landscapes, where class and racial distinctions and family histories mold society. This is the stunningly talented Burke's 21st book and his best—until the next one. Dave Robicheaux, the psychologically scarred detective for the New Iberia, La., sheriff's department, investigates two brutal murders, one of a naïve teenage girl, the other of a feckless drug-addled prostitute. The author provides a dense, richly imagined background for his characters, especially the sinister ones: malevolent Legion Guidry, a nightmarish figure from Robicheaux's boyhood; a power-hungry tavern owner; an arrogant lawyer; a combative female PI; the prostitute's Mafioso father; and Marvin Oates, an enigmatic Bible salesman who floats ominously through the narrative. Robicheaux doesn't believe the obvious suspect—Tee Bobby Hulin, a drug-addicted musical genius—is the murderer. Aided and disrupted by his obstreperous pal, Clete Purcel, Robicheaux runs into the usual trouble. Legion gives Robicheaux such a ferocious beating that he reverts to drinking and addictive painkillers. Though the search for the murderer moves the story, the novel is really an examination of the savage relationships of the characters and the palpable presence of the past. Burke offers a vivid social history of an inbred, corrupt place. As Clete so aptly tells his friend, "This is Louisiana, Dave. Guatemala North. Quit pretending it's the United States." (June 10)Forecast:Expect another bestseller from two-time Edgar Award winner Burke, who should be attracting more readers of "literary" fiction with his fine writing. -
Library Journal
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Booklist
March 15, 2002
Burke does terrific bad guys, spiritual descendants of Max Cady, as played by Robert Mitchum in the 1962 version of " Cape Fear." Dave Robicheaux, Burke's Cajun detective and the hero of 10 previous installments in this much-acclaimed series, has tackled an impressively evil crew of sociopaths over the years, many of whom have been fat cats with well-hidden bent streaks. This time, though, Burke looks to the lower depths to find his villain, and the creature that emerges, as if from some primordial swamp, strikes a new kind of fear in everyone he encounters. The mysterious, seemingly indestructible Legion Guidry, once the overseer on a Louisiana plantation, where he raped numerous field hands, has resurfaced near New Iberia and may be linked to the murder of a teenager and a prostitute. Convinced that the drug-addicted blues singer under arrest for the first killing is innocent, Robicheaux goes after Guidry and winds up taking the most humiliating beating of his life at the hands of a man purported to be 75 years old. The particulars of who killed who are eventually sorted out, but the real drama this time comes in Robicheaux's chilling encounter with evil and his recognition of his own fear. The satanic Guidry--hints of otherworldliness are sprinkled throughout the text--is as compelling a bad guy as any in literature; like Mitchum as Cady, he reminds us in the most visceral of ways that the world can be an utterly alien place. The sights, sounds, and tastes of Cajun country, which provide the familiar ambience in the Robicheaux series, are not absent this time, but they are overwhelmed by the subhuman stench of pure malevolence. An atypical entry in the series, then, but a compelling one.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2002, American Library Association.) -
Library Journal
April 15, 2002
After a detour to Montana in Bitterroot, Burke returns to New Iberia, LA, and his popular police detective Dave Robicheaux. While investigating the brutal rape and murder of a local teenager, Robicheaux uncovers several links between his main suspect, a talented musician named Tee Bobby Hulin, and the LaSalle family, New Iberia's plantation aristocracy. Perry LaSalle is Hulin's lawyer (and maybe his cousin), and he also employs a 74-year-old former plantation overseer named Legion Guidry, who believes that he still lives in the Old South and can treat his black neighbors any way he chooses. Meanwhile, Robicheaux's ex-partner from his days with the New Orleans Police Department, Clete Purcell, is trying to track down a man who may be a serial killer. The cases converge as the investigators try to sort out the guilty from the innocent and those with bad intentions from those who are truly evil. As Robicheaux tries to set right the world around him, the book explores some of the most troubling aspects of Louisiana's (and America's) racist past. This is Burke at his best. Recommended for all public libraries. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 2/15/02.] Patrick Wall, University City P.L., MOCopyright 2002 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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