Latest featured videos from Journal-News.com
James Lee Burke is simply the best... | Book Nook
 

Home > Blogs > Book Nook > Archives > 2009 > August > 02 > Entry

James Lee Burke is simply the best…

James Lee Burke is that rare author who just keeps getting better with each book. That’s hard to do. He is best known for his series that features the Louisiana lawman Dave Robicheaux. Last year, he published his 17th book in that series.

Burke has written a dozen other books. These include short story collections, stand-alone novels, and a series featuring former Texas Ranger turned Montana lawyer Billy Bob Holland. Burke’s latest novel, “Rain Gods,” is a stand-alone that reconnects readers with Billy Bob’s cousin, Hackberry Holland, a Texas sheriff.

Long-time fans might recall the last time Hackberry turned up in a Burke book. It was back in the early 1970s. Well, Hack is back, older and still fiercely enforcing the law in his rural county on the Mexican border.

As “Rain Gods” opens, Sheriff Holland has gotten an anonymous tip about a terrible event. Human smugglers murdered a group of women. Hackberry Holland finds their graves near an old deserted church. Who could have done such an awful thing?

Hackberry and his deputy, Pam Tibbs, focus in on their only clue, the anonymous tipster who called in the information that led to this gruesome find. It came from Pete Flores, a young veteran of the Iraq War. Pete and his girlfriend, Vikki Gaddis, have gone underground, hiding out from the killers who once offered Pete money to help smuggle those unfortunate women across the border.

When the smugglers began killing the women, Pete ran off. Now everybody is looking for him; the sheriff, federal agents and a network of shadowy professional assassins. Pete already had plenty of demons on his plate. Badly burned by an explosion in Iraq, he has nightmarish memories. He battles a powerful temptation to drown his emotions with alcohol.

This struggle with alcoholism is a recurring theme in many of Burke’s books. Dave Robicheaux is a recovering alcoholic. His best friend and sidekick, Clete Purcell, remains a heavy drinker. This creates conflict in their relationship.

Sheriff Hackberry Holland is another former imbiber. He resists the infrequent desire for a shot of Jack Daniels on ice. Like Pete Flores, Hackberry is also plagued by flashbacks to wartime atrocities. His war was the Korean War. He was a POW, and tortured.

Burke’s villains are extraordinary creations. “Rain Gods” has an entire range of bad guys; pornographers, drug smugglers, cold-blooded enforcers. Jack Collins is the worst of these. They call him “The Preacher.” He has to be the most complicated, perplexing villain Burke has ever done.

“The Preacher” believes that he is on a mission from on high. His warped and distorted vision of heavenly retribution is brutally enforced with his Thompson sub-machine gun. In classic Burke fashion, the good guys and the bad ones circle one another until the final showdown.

“Rain Gods” is a potent allegory that kept me up until the wee hours of the morning. James Lee Burke never cheats his readers — nobody does it better.

Vick Mickunas

Permalink | Comments (1) | Post your comment | Categories: confessions of a galley slave

Comments

By james walker

August 2, 2009 2:50 PM | Link to this

JLB is not only one of my favorites, but has kept me wide awake on many a cross country trip thanks to audio books. His ability to describe a scene is the best I’ve encountered in modern fiction. His characters are wonderful blends of virtue and vice. Not a one dimensional in the bunch. Can’t wait to get my hands on Rain Gods.
Post a comment



Remember me?


Commenting on this blog is moderated. Your blog will wait in a queue for approval by an administrator.


*HTML not allowed in comments. Your e-mail address is required.

 
Home | News | Sports | Entertainment | Opinion | Life | Recreation | Jobs | Cars | Homes
Advertising Media Kit | Online Ad Studio | Advertiser Tools | Customer Service | Our Partners | RSS | Site Map

Copyright © 2009 Cox Ohio Publishing, Dayton, Ohio, USA. All rights reserved.

By using this site, you accept the terms of our Visitors Agreement and Privacy Policy. You may wish to note our other business policies.

This website is ACAP-enabled