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Bitterroot
 
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Bitterroot [Audiobook] (Audio Cassette)

by James Lee Burke (Author), Will Patton (Reader)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Product details

  • Audio Cassette
  • Publisher: Orion (2 Aug 2001)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0752846167
  • ISBN-13: 978-0752846163
  • Product Dimensions: 13.9 x 10.7 x 3.3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 1,885,997 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Product Description

'John Steinbeck once said Montana is a love affair. If a person was going to make his troth with any particular place on earth, I don't think he could find a better one than the stretch of road I was now on. Every bridge crossed a postcard stream, every mountain tumbled into one higher and a deeper green than itself.' But in the Bitterroot Valley of western Montana, the love affair has a chilling, violent side, as ex-Texas Ranger, now lawyer, Billy Bob soon discovers when he goes for a few weeks fishing with his friend from Vietnam days, Doc Voss. Then Doc's daughter Maisey is brutaly gang-raped and beaten by bikers. Ring leader Lamar Ellison walks free when the DNA samples 'get lost' and Billy Bob wonders whose side the sheriff is on? Ellison is burned alive and Doc is arrested. So much for Billy Bob's vacation - Doc needs a lawyer, and fast. Not only that: newly released killer Wyatt Dixon has tracked Billy Bob to Montana, bent on avenging the death of his sister for which he holds Billy Bob responsible. The grotesque Wyatt, 'like a virus that immediately recognises the antibodies in an immune system as its enemy', is only one thread of a tangled web of evil that includes neo-Nazi militias, gold miners who tip cyanide into the rivers, a paedophile ring and the Mob. As the corpses of the guilty and innocent pile up, and still haunted by his dead friend L Q Navarro, Billy Bob stands almost alone, determined that the centre will hold, no matter what evil threatens it. The breathtaking Montana landscape of hills, forests and rivers is described in prose of breathtaking lyricism in counterpoint to the darkness. There is no better crime writer around as Burke, poet of the tortured South, embraces the West.

About the Author

James Lee Burke is the author of eighteen previous novels, including ten featuring detective Dave Robicheaux. He now lives in Missoula, Montana and New Iberia, Louisiana, with his wife Pearl.

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Average Customer Review
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Banal Evildoers Strike Close to Billy Bob, 21 July 2004
By Professor Donald Mitchell "Jesus Makes Me a P... (Boston) - See all my reviews
(TOP 10 REVIEWER)      
In Bitterroot, the Billy Bob Holland and Dave Robicheaux characters become very similar. The stylish differences between them introduced in Cimarron Rose are almost entirely missing here. If you like the most violent and vicious of the Robicheaux novels of good versus evil, you will find Bitterroot equally appealing. If you get tired of reading about disgusting crimes and abuse of power against women, children, and the innocent, you will find much of the detail of this book repulsive. I graded the book down for having overdone those qualities and for having abandoned the story within a story element for developing Billy Bob's character that made Cimarron Rose so fascinating.

Billy Bob Holland is taken temporarily away from his normal haunts in Deaf Smith, Texas to the apparently tranquil, rural setting of Montana, near Missoula. His friend, Doc Voss, has given Billy Bob an invitation for a visit of indefinite length. Packing up his fishing gear, he hopes that ghosts don't cross state lines. But they do. However, the spirit of his old Texas Ranger partner, L.Q. Navarro, isn't present as often here as in the other Billy Bob Holland novels, and mainly plays the role of clue giver. Once there, Billy Bob finds that Doc Voss has everyone in an uproar. Voss is challenging the gold miners for dumping arsenic into the land. He takes on the local militia. Voss also runs afoul of those who just want to keep things peaceful.

Matters are soon complicated by the arrival of a nemesis for Billy Bob, Wyatt Dixon, who has just been released from county jail in Texas. Dixon left behind a drawing of a wheelbarrow full of severed heads . . . one of which belonged to Billy Bob. "I don't know him, Sheriff," replies Billy Bob to the warning. Dixon is the brother of a client of Billy Bob's who smothered her children. Dixon blames Billy Bob for her early death while in prison. Dixon soon lets Billy Bob know that he is in jeopardy, as well as those he loves and cares about.

The rest of the slimy characters aren't nearly as interesting or dangerous as Dixon. They include members of a biker gang, the local militia types, celebrities, money launderers, and aggressive law enforcement officers.

Soon Temple Carroll, his investigative assistant, and Lucas, his son, arrive for a spot of vacation, and are drawn into the conflict. If you like Temple Carroll and Lucas from earlier novels, you will be pleased to see both of their characters developed further in Bitterroot.

As crimes and threats bandy about, the dangerous situation takes on the element of a classic mystery. Doc Voss becomes suspect number one for many of the crimes, and Billy Bob begins to represent him. However, Billy Bob draws more on his Texas Ranger experience than his legal skills. The resolution is an interesting one in which Billy Bob uses his understanding of the psychology of each villain to set them in conflict with one another.

Unlike Cimarron Rose, there is no brilliant courtroom drama in this book.

Billy Bob also comes to terms with some of his guilt, and starts to connect to other people in new ways.

Phrase crafting is the strength of the book. Mr. Burke continues to have a way with words that can turn even horror into beautiful prose. In the process, he transforms everything he imagines into something unique to share with you. Without the beautiful writing, this clunky plot and gratuitous ugliness would be at best a two star book.

After you read this book, ask yourself how many of your problems are created by yourself. In this book, Doc Voss clearly attracts lots of evil-doers by his own actions. How could Doc Voss have accomplished more and risked less? What are the lessons for your life?

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