Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
WRITE ANOTHER BOOK NOW,GODDAMNIT!, 19 April 2006
Excellent!The best police procedual novel I've read in the last twenty years.Hanson,Viet-vet and now police patrolman,is,as you can imagine,cynical and careworn,working the nightshift in a sleazy district of Portland,Oregon.Change the locale to L.A. and you could say so far so predictable,but Anderson renders every character so real and believable that you can't second guess anything that's going to happen.Hanson is hard-bitten,weary and cynical as only a war veteran perhaps can be,and yet he has retained his humanity and is an entirely empathetic character.The plot is slight but enough to hang the characters on and in the end you feel like you have read a genuine slice of '70's streetlife,and given that Hanson is obviously modelled on the author's own experience,we probably have done.
Kent Anderson is easily as good as Craig Holden,Scott Phillips or Michael Connelly.This guy can write.The only problem is,he's only written 2 books.So,my message to Kent is - write another one soon,because if you write it I'll buy it.I've been waiting 6 years now,dammit!
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
5.0 out of 5 stars
All Down the Line, 6 May 2011
I think I prefer this to Anderson's first, only because the territory is, for me, slightly closer to home. Both books are very well written, however, using a kind of collage, layer on layer approach to building up a plotline, which if you think about it, is a bit like real life.
A guy called Hanson is the hero of both, and has a penchant for embracing reality as it comes, which isn't a very comfortable way to live.
This is remeniscent of 'The Wire', but just about predates it.
Vietnam underscores Hanson's experience of life as a street cop, and this book is a record of his attempts to reconcile his own experience with the demands of the local PD and the hopes and wishes of his friends (and dog).
For my money, this is right down the line.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Not your typical cop story..., 28 May 2001
By Patrick M. - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Night Dogs (Mass Market Paperback)
Although you can find NIGHT DOGS in the suspense/thriller section at your neighborhood bookstore, Kent Anderson's story of the stark reality of a Portland cop's beat in the aftermath of the Vietnam War is much more than your everyday thriller. Officer Hanson is a character you will not soon forget. A Vietnam veteran haunted by his military experience, Hanson finds purpose in his job as a cop in the North Precinct, a proud but poor Portland neighborhood, where the police are more often at odds with the residents than protecting them. But this is not your typical cop-story or your run of the mill thriller. The language is brutal, the characters peculiar, the overall tone is murky, dark. This book is not for the timid. Hanson's motivations are disturbing, and the whole story has an abrasiveness to it that is not often found in suspense novels, where that final confrontation between good and evil is what keeps you turning the pages. The reader of NIGHT DOGS is not necessarily motivated by that imminent conflict with the antagonist, but the nagging wonder of whether or not Hanson will ultimately destroy himself. The showdown between good and evil is nullified because the line between the two has been erased and they have melded into one gruesome blur. As an exclusive reader of thriller novels, this is the first that I have felt strongly enough about to write a review. The characters, not just Hanson but his supporting cast as well, will likely stick in your memory for some time. I have read a half dozen novels since finishing NIGHT DOGS, but Anderson's images remain as strong as ever. This is an important book. I recommend it highly to readers of all genres.
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Real life in Portland, 1975, 5 Dec 1999
By James Bellah - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Night Dogs (Hardcover)
I worked with Kent Anderson in North Precinct in 1975. Although the book is fiction, many of the stories have a ring of truth and the gut feelings he describes so well are real. He humanizes the police and the people on the street, far from a "Just the facts, Ma'm" kind of novel. Cops can cry, cops can be afraid and Anderson shows what it was like. Our police union newspaper editor gave it a bad review, saying it was too racist. But then again, but he never worked anything other than middle class white neighborhoods. I guess you had to be there. Read the book and you will be.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Best Cop Novel Since Wambaughs Choirboys, 28 Mar 2000
By Dan "Lasombra" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Night Dogs (Mass Market Paperback)
Night Dogs caught me totally by surprise. I bought the book not knowing what to expect, and after I read the first 3 pages I knew I had found something unique. The book is not a dramatic account of the search for a serial killer or a drug lord, but instead gives an episodic glimpse into the life of a young cop who is still trying to make sense of his experiences in Vietnam as a Green Beret. The most influential people in my life have been vietnam vets, and the Hanson character has helped me understand what the young men of that generation who served went through. Anyone interested in police work or the Vietnam war should read this book and then read Sympathy For The Devil to better understand where the sometimes cruel Officer Hanson character is coming from. This is a fantastic book, I hope Mr. Anderson is getting the recognition he deserves.
|
|
|