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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Crusaders Cross, 3 Aug 2005
This review is from: Crusader's Cross (Hardcover)
Only the present exists, so the philosophers tell us, but for Dave Robicheaux the past is not mysterious, rather it lives with him. This new novel finds Dave initially retired but dwelling on a occurrence many years before when he and his brother were still young when a girl vocalist who helps them survive a brush with drowning disappears. Gentle probing of the past produces an immediate response from two nasty police officers. Their tactics launch Dave back into police work as a Sheriff's Deputy for the newly promoted Helen Soileau. This is one cool relationship that somehow never takes off as it should, one gets the feeling that James Lee Burke is just not sure where this could go. Investigations lead Dave to the Chalon family, a strange brew that has a long history back to the crusades. An interesting triangular tension is set up between the sultry Honoria , Valentine,her journalist brother and Dave. The tectonic plates beneath this triangular structure move viscously and without warning. The entire tale is set against the backdrop of a serial killer working the Baton Rouge parish. Addicts will be pleased that Cletus Purcell still works on the borderlines between law and anarchy, he brings a pleasing complexion to a novel that is particularly dark. Dave's struggle with his demons is put to the test and for a chapter or two one is left on a knife-edge about his success with these demons. During Dave's investigations he meets Molly, lay worker who is known in the community as a nun. Both of these are, in their own way, outcasts and a gravity of attraction pulls them together with, for me at least, surprising results. The novel is as usual well crafted although since Jolie Blon's Bounce I've felt a slight unease, maybe reflecting that of the author. A brilliant experience to read for a glimpse into some dark corners of the soul.
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12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Back at his best, 26 Oct 2006
James Lee Burke's Robicheaux series represents some of the finest detective fiction ever written. His novels weave together the past and the present, social comment and gritty plotlines, and flawed characters at society's margins to create a vivid picture of Louisiana and New Orleans.
All this is done in a very distinctive and lyrical style, not only unique amongst crime writers but which evokes a dark brooding atmosphere, while making some acute observations which will leave their mark.
This book represents a return to top form. There have been a couple of recent books which have been a little formulaic, but here, although the form is familiar, Lee Burke has managed to breathe new life into it. The pace here is quicker, the style familiar but altogether tighter.
The plot theme, the past creating trouble in the present, is typical JLB, and allows him room to integrate his pet themes of social justice and the environment, which he has seldom done with more power.
If you are interested in reading the best(detective)fiction that the USA has to offer then I recommend this book - if you read it the odds are that you will want to read the earlier books. You will not regret it.
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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Burke at his very best, 3 Jan 2006
This review is from: Crusader's Cross (Hardcover)
Crusader's Cross marks a stunning return to top form from James Lee Burke after a couple of recent disappointments. Having said that, even Burke's "disappointments" are up there with the best of crime fiction. Crusader's Cross sees Dave Robicheaux looking back into his youth when he and his half-brother Jimmie were saved from sharks and befriended by the mysterious Ida Durbin in 1958. Jimmie wants her to run away with him, but she disappears and is not seen again. In 2004, a dying friend hints to Dave that he may have information relating to Ida's disappearance. At the same time, a serial killer is leaving bodies all across Baton Rouge. Dave is driven to investigate Ida's disappearance and pleads with Helen Soileau, now the sherriff of New Iberia, to reinstate him as a detective. During his search for Ida and the Baton Rouge killer, Dave runs up against the Chalons family who can trace their lineage back to the Crusades. he also meets a nun who, conveniently, has not taken her vows, and forms an interesting relationship with her. Clete Purcell plays his usual role as Dave's best friend and rent-a-bull in a china shop, and between them, they continue to wreck bars and restaurants and end up barely on the right side of the law! Burke's writing is tighter than usual, his description of the countryside and environs around New Iberia are stunning, as usual, and there is more maturity than ever in this novel. My only issue is that, as Dave says in the story, he was 20 in 1958 when Ida disappeared, this would make him at least 66 at the time this story is set. He is still getting the girls, and still beating up the bad guys (although some of them must have been older than him, so perhaps that wasn't too difficult!). Maybe there's hope for all of us... A marvellous story. Read it and enjoy the pure poetry of Burke's writing at it's peak.
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