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The Tin Roof Blowdown (Dave Robicheaux Mysteries)
 
 

The Tin Roof Blowdown (Dave Robicheaux Mysteries) [Kindle Edition]

James Lee Burke
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (114 customer reviews)

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Kindle Edition £4.99  
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Paperback £6.07  
Audio, CD, Abridged, Audiobook £10.12  
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Product Description

Review

'The Tin Roof Blowdown is more than a crime novel; more than a literary novel even. It is a work of profound historical value and importance ... To say I enjoyed this book is an understatement ... there were moments when I wanted to put the book down, it was so painful to continue. But I couldn't. Now, I dare say, will anyone else.' (Mark Timlin INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY )

'The Tin Roof Blowdown is the novel James Lee Burke was born to write. His imagination has always tended to the apocalyptical - but Hurricane Katrina outdid his worst inventions ... The passages describing the actual flooding are tremendously powerful but Burke also weaves a fully satisfying story into this extreme event.' (David Sexton EVENING STANDARD )

'This New Orleans looks like Bosch and reads like Ballard ... it's worth emphasising that no 'literary' novelist has performed this task of imaginative witness to disaster yet. And none will do it half so well as Burke. ... he proves more forcefully than ever that he can dive down these mean - or drowned - streets and strike both a tragic, and epic, note.' (Boyd Tonkin THE INDEPENDENT )

'In the US, he's often regarded as the crimewriter's crimewriter. But that was before Hurricane Katrina ripped the soul out of Burke's beloved New Orleans and inspired him to write what has to be his most gripping thriller to date ... Burke's descriptions, especially of the aftermath of the hurricane, are more vivid and powerful than any piece of reportage I've yet to come across.' (Henry Sutton THE MIRROR )

'probably his finest novel ... it's quite an achievement to make the 16th novel in a series a personal best, but its more than that - it stands comparison with the best of Southern fiction.' (Peter Guttridge THE OBSERVER )

'occasionally something comes along which transcends the narrow confines of the genre: a book which, by any measure, is a truly wonderful piece of writing. Burke's latest work is a case in point. It confirms, if confirmation were needed, that he is one of America's greatest living novelists.' (THE HERALD )

'The story, about greed and murder and redemption, contains some of Burke's most brilliantly realised characters ... a compelling and moving narrative, punctuated by his devastating descriptions of the ravaged city.' (Susanna Yager SUNDAY TELEGRAPH )

'You feel guilty for enjoying it so much ... a great piece of art has come out of human trouble ... it is his greatest novel' (Boyd Hilton RADIO R LIVE SIMON MAYO BOOKCLUB )

'Burke's prose, jagged and discordant ... has always had a hallucinatory quality, but here his descriptions of drowning, floating corpses and devastated buildings provide a background tableaux of madness and terror that knowingly invokes Bosch's visions of hell.' (METRO )

'Burke mixes street slang and exquisite, but always precise, descriptive writing ... Robicheaux is the perfect vehicle for expressing the brooding and righteous anger which is the only possible response to the failure of the United States Government to organise relief when the levees broke. The Tin Roof Blowdown is proof that current affairs can be worked into fiction. It's account of the destruction wreaked by the floods has an enduring power.' (TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT )

'a beautifully written howl of rage and pain over the disaster - social, political, human - that was Hurricane Katrina ... Burke has crafted a killer mystery and a passionate tribute to to his beloved New Orleans.' (TIME OUT )

'The Tin Roof Blowdown is, inevitably, sadder and angrier than previous Robicheaux novels. We always knew James Lee Burke was a master craftsman of the crime genre. This proves him to be more than that.' (Marcel Berlins THE TIMES )

'there is no doubting the power of the passages devoted to the hurricane's impact, where the author's twin gifts for physical description and biblical rhetoric fuse stunningly to give the novel an apocalyptic backdrop.' (John Dugdale SUNDAY TIMES )

'Burke's novel is a powerful mix of near-journalism reportage ... undercut with a simmering rage at the corporate theft and government incompetence that made the clear-up such a difficult and devisive task.' (IRISH TIMES )

'the characters are beautifully realised and their motivation strong. But it is the fury at the authorities response to the crisis that gives this its added dimension.' (Toby Clements DAILY TELEGRAPH )

David Sexton, EVENING STANDARD

'The Tin Roof Blowdown is the novel James Lee Burke was born to write. His imagination has always tended to the apocalyptical - but Hurricane Katrina outdid his worst inventions ... The passages describing the actual flooding are tremendously powerful but Burke also weaves a fully satisfying story into this extreme event.'

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 780 KB
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster (17 July 2007)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B000SEHKHE
  • Text-to-Speech: Not enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (114 customer reviews)
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James Lee Burke
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Customer Reviews

114 Reviews
5 star:
 (41)
4 star:
 (31)
3 star:
 (28)
2 star:
 (10)
1 star:
 (4)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (114 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

22 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The best got better, 21 Aug 2007
By 
Mr. P. Hobson "Paul Hobson" (United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This novel is the latest in the Dave Robicheaux series. Robicheaux is Burkes flawed hero; an ex-alcoholic cop and a man so basically fair and decent that he almost represents another age. A violent man too, when pushed.

The Tin Roof Blowdown takes place against a backdrop of Hurrican Katrina and the destruction it caused to New Orleans. Called from his local district of New Iberia to help out in beseiged Big Sleazy, Robicheaux gets caught up in the dissapearance of a Catholic Priest, a random shooting that turns out to be anything but and the theft of money and jewels from a member of the mob. Burke weaves a story so involving and creates characters that you care for so much that it was difficult for me not to read this book in one sitting.

Burke does not deal in black and white but in the struggle between light and dark (and the grey areas in between) that wages in all of us. His wrongdoers are often people who have made poor choices or ordinary people caught up in circumstances that they feel unable to control.

Dave and Cletus (his ex-partner and the sort of man we'd all love to have at our side when our backs are against the wall)are characters so real in my mind that I can think of very few authors capable of drawing them so vividly. This book is a triumph and although it is part of a series of books about Dave Robicheaux I would not let that stop you reading it. Read it and I guarrantee you'll want to start at the begining and read them all; it really is that good.

James Lee Burke is one of America's finest authors and I would urge you to check him out. Not only is he an excellent storyteller but as a social commentator on the basic human condition and the immense greed and wickedness that thrives in the 21st Century, he has no peers.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Start of a Beautiful Friendship, 12 April 2010
By 
Edward C. Williams "Ted Williams" (Nottingham, United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Tin Roof Blowdown (Paperback)
I suppose i should start this review with a disclaimer, this is the first James Lee Burke i have read, so five stars may leave me nowhere to go in future.
I found JLB's writing style to be wonderfully emotive and evocative at turns, and while the book runs at a fairly fast pace, and never drags, the sense of place, and the descriptions of the characters are drawn with such deft strokes that they will stay with you long after you close the pages.
Indeed, it's possibly with the characters he does some of his best work, as he develops them subtly by their actions, not pages of plodding exposition.
He gives us a wonderfully varied cast from the loyal, but loose cannon that is Clete Purcel, to the creepily unsettling Ronald Bledsoe
Their motives and deeds never seem telegraphed or forced, and even the most downtrodden antagonists are shown in a somewhat sympathetic light.
It's fair to say that the picture painted of New Orleans after Katrina is not a pretty one, and JLB is not afraid to shirk from the horrific conditions found there, but despite this, JLB's love of the place itself shines through in virtually every chapter and has made me already start adding the rest of his considerable body of work to my wishlist

Highly Recommended

oh and there's a three-legged Raccoon called tripod, not at all integral to the story but how can you resist that ?
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A triumph - an insider's view of misery, 13 Aug 2007
By 
Ms. Elaine Bull "grassyhay" (Burton-on-Trent, UK) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Once again Burke delivers!
We all saw the images of the misery caused by Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans now we can read the thoughts of a man who saw it all.
Once again marvellous characters - some good some bad - ain't we all!
The reader can actually smell the distruction and putrefaction of a society brought to its knees by nature and the failures of the powers that be. Here nature wins - both the elements and the innate "nature" of man!
A book which is very hard to put down but one which you hope never ends!
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