Hundreds of new, fantastic and fast recipes from the nation’s favourite cook. The recipes are all fast and easy to make. Best of all, it is on offer for only £11.99!

Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Books » Burke, James Lee » Swan Peak  
Main Category
Books
Sponsors

Related Categories
• Burke, James Lee
B
Authors, A-Z
Crime, Thrillers & Mystery
Subjects
• General AAS
Mystery
Crime, Thrillers & Mystery
Subjects
Books
• General AAS
Thrillers
Crime, Thrillers & Mystery
Subjects
Books
• General
Fiction
Subjects
Books
• General AAS
Fiction
Subjects
Books
• English
Language (feature_browse-bin)
Refinements
Books
• Hardcover
Format (binding_browse-bin)
Refinements
Books
• Regular Size
Font Size (format_browse-bin)
Refinements
Books

Swan Peak

Swan Peak
Author: James Lee Burke
Publisher: Orion
Category: Book

List Price: £14.99
Buy New: £9.15
You Save: £5.84 (39%)



New (24) Used (2) from £7.77

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 2769

Media: Hardcover
Pages: 416
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.6
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.4 x 1.7

ISBN: 1409100502
EAN: 9781409100508
ASIN: 1409100502

Publication Date: September 4, 2008
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours

Also Available In:

  • Audio CD - SWAN PEAK (AUDIOBOOK) (12 CD) (The Dave Robicheaux series, Book 17) UNABRIDGED Audio CD
  • Paperback - Swan Peak
  • Paperback - Swan Peak
  • Hardcover - Swan Peak (Dave Robicheaux Mysteries)
  • Hardcover - Swan Peak (Wheeler Hardcover)
  • Leather Bound - Swan Peak
  • Paperback - Swan Peak (Dave Robicheaux Mysteries)

Similar Items:

  • Homicide:
  • The Private Patient (Adam Dalgliesh Mystery)
  • Phantom Prey
  • The Dawn Patrol
  • Dead Man's Footsteps

Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars Middling   October 2, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Dave Robicheaux and Clete Purcell are their usual selves in James Lee Burke's latest novel, but they seem spread too thin against the landscape of Montana: I look forward to their return to the claustrophobic and humid parish of New Iberia.
Swann Peak is Burke's most uneven novel for some time. The characters are as vivid and morally ambivalent as always, but much as I wanted the plot twists to be sublime, they were too often ridiculous.
I'm left with the impression perhaps of a tired author who is drawing breath after the remarkable Tin Roof Blowdown; and certainly of an author who is capable of much better.



4 out of 5 stars Magnificent... but Flawed (4.5 *stars)   September 13, 2008
 11 out of 11 found this review helpful

This is the first Dave Robicheux novel since `Black Cherry Blues' to take the deputy sheriff out of his home state of Louisiana (laid to waste after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita) and into the mid-west farmlands of Montana. Not coincidentally, these are also the two states that James Lee Burke calls his home. Here Robicheux is enjoying a trip with his wife Molly and big buddy Cletus Purcell, where they're ranch house guests of Robicheux's friend Albert Hollister - a retired English professor and writer.

Virtually from page one - which depicts Purcell doing a spot of solo fishing - there's trouble. Two employees of Ridley Wellstone, an extremely rich Texan oil man who has relocated to Montana, inform Purcell he's on private land, insult him, break his fishing rod (a VERY bad idea) and chase him.

From there the action kicks off as Robicheux and Purcell become entangled in events at Wellstone's mansion - which he shares with his badly burnt brother Lesley and Lesley's wife Jamie Sue - and the search for a serial killer.

In a parallel plot, 6ft 5in prison guard Troyce Nix violently sodomises country singer Jimmy Dale Greenwood, a prisoner in his care, and pushes this gentle guy into attacking him with a homemade shiv. Nix is badly injured but recovers after a short spell in hospital. He then pursues his attacker, accompanied by a lady friend he picks-up along the way. His pursuit of Greenwood becomes inextricably linked with the Robicheux/Wellstone story, and there's a crossover of characters into both plotlines that Burke controls brilliantly.

`Swan Peak' is the seventeenth novel in the series and displays all the strengths and weaknesses of the best of the books.

The strengths? The sheer impassioned poetry of the writing and the vividly described locales; the action scenes of measured brutality; the finely nuanced language and expertly developed sub-plots (even if they're the SAME ones he recycles, novel after novel!) If you've never read Mr Burke before you'll be stunned by the literacy on display: this is very powerful stuff.

The weaknesses? EVERY James Lee Burke character whether they are rich or poor, intellectual or uneducated, speaks in exactly the same way: the same cadences, the same tone and intonation. And each one delivers virtually identical, perfectly articulated insults. I am also a little tired of his predilection for peopling his books with strange-looking or deformed men.

Furthermore, every book has Robicheux describing a character as a `psychopath' virtually upon meeting them, and we are expected to share his snap assessment even though we've been presented with NO evidence to back it up at this stage.

But lets not dwell too long upon the faults, these are easily outweighed by Mr Burke's formidable writing gifts.

The events of 'Swan Peak' take place in a mythical America, and although the setting is contemporary, the action and dialogue could easily have taken place in the 1930s or in any decade between then and now. Some of the slang: button men, gangbangers, 'diming' is also outdated and a little quaint.

As usual, Clete Purcell (an ex-NOPD cop) is more violent than most of the baddies and is like a straining pit-bull on a leash. It takes a few measured words from Robicheux to calm him down, and even then they don't always work. Both men are Vietnam vets, and are still visited by demons created from the horrors they've witnessed. These are very complex guys, and sometimes the line between good and evil is more than a little blurred. This is also the case with Troyce Nix - the most psychologically interesting character the author has created in a long while.

Lee Burke keeps everything in focus here and his mastery of situation and plot is never in doubt - and he delivers a quite fantastic ending. Even after acknowledging his weaknesses he is still palpably one of the greats of modern crime fiction. I can recommend this to fans and those who fancy trying `something different' for a change. Not quite the best book in the series, I award this 4.5 stars.



4 out of 5 stars One Thing Leads to Another: Karma Creates Connections   August 26, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Consider Swan Peak a taut Dave Robicheaux thriller about bringing down the bad guys transferred from Katrina-depleted Louisiana to sparking Montana. Since Louisiana is usually the major character in this series' books, that shift cuts down the local color by one star.

Are there sleazy people in Montana? They seem to be everywhere that Dave and Clete Purcell look.

Dave and Molly have left Louisiana to recover from Katrina, and Clete has joined them. Naturally, it doesn't take much for Clete to begin stirring things up. In this case, a choice of campground begins an escalating conflict that no one seems to be able to or wants to avoid.

Pretty soon bodies are piling up around Dave and Clete, but it's not clear what the motives are. Both with and without encouragement, Dave begins investigating. That search draws them both into the business of the local, reclusive rich who want to drill for oil and gas and make lots of money through evangelism. It's an odd group of people, and the closer you look . . . the odder it gets.

In a related story line, a convict looks to do his time and get out . . . but a gun bull has other ideas.

The book's main weakness is that James Lee Burke often tells rather than shows what's going on. At times, you'll feel like you are in a lecture hall rather than reading an engrossing book.

As usual, the story has more slime in it than ten usual murder mysteries. But overcoming the slime is part of the appeal of this series so I'm sure you know what to expect.



5 out of 5 stars Evil's Gravity   July 9, 2008
 15 out of 15 found this review helpful

James Lee Burke's latest novel, Swan Peak, is another chapter in the life of his troubled character Dave Robicheaux. It is set in the wilds of Montana rather than the lush lands of Louisiana. An early novel, Black Cherry Blues was similarly set against the Montana backdrop of mountains and grazing land.
This time Dave and his friend Cletus Purcell are ostensibly taking a well earned break from the ravages of Hurricane Katrina. At one point Dave reflects, in a beautifully constructed paragraph, of how the intersections in his life seem practically predetermined as is the attraction of iron filings for a magnet. There is a sense of evil in the first few pages as Clete is bullied by some unpleasant characters who move him off the territory of a rich landowner. It is surely a craft of very few authors to write so infectiously and to create such a sense of bad things to come as does James Lee Burke.
The story is set around the rich landowner and some gruesome killings in the same area. It has, rather like an airliner, a smooth and progressive glide slope to a climax rather than a landing. As a reader one is drawn and even captivated by each turn of the screw.
Woven into this story are some old and some new characters along with just a hint of romance. One or two descriptions of the Montana environment are reminiscent of early Lee Burke writing about Louisiana and I have to say I wish there were more of these.
Quite where Lee Burke gets his material from is a mystery but how he creates such an art from whatever the source is very impressive. It is, yet again, a great read and I'm glad to say the author still retains those qualities of writing that attracted me to the Robicheaux novels all those years ago.



4 out of 5 stars "The world respect(s) brute force and brute force alone, no matter what people claim."   July 9, 2008
 5 out of 7 found this review helpful

(3.5 stars) Following the decimation of New Orleans by Hurricane Katrina, described in James Lee Burke's last novel, The Tin Roof Blowdown (Dave Robicheaux Mysteries), long-time New Iberia Parish detective Dave Robicheaux has accepted an invitation to recover emotionally on a ranch in western Montana. Robicheaux's long-time buddy Clete Purcell, who accompanies him, has not even started to recover. For Purcell, "the booze he drank and the weed he smoked and the pills he dropped didn't work anymore," and Robicheaux is desperately afraid for his friend.

Within days of their arrival in Montana, the past catches up with them. Clete Purcell runs afoul of two thugs, one of whom once worked for a Nevada gangster who was killed with his entourage when their small plane crashed in the mountains. Purcell has long been suspected of having been involved in the crash. These two thugs now work for wealthy Ridley Wellstone, who is financing a charismatic ministry operated by his young wife. Running parallel to these two plot threads is the story of Jimmy Dale Greenwood, a young man horribly abused by a "gunbull" during a two-year prison sentence. His abuser is now in the same area of Montana, near Missoula and Flathead Lake, as Jimmy Dale. In yet additional plot lines, two young college students are found tortured and murdered in the hills behind the ranch where Robicheaux and Purcell are staying, and a Hollywood producer making a film nearby, and his companion, are shot and burned at a highway rest stop. As these disparate plot threads begin to overlap and explode in violence, Robicheaux and Purcel are up to their eyeballs in the action.

Author James Lee Burke's vaunted ability to create vibrant characters and convey atmosphere through stunning descriptions is on full display here in Big Sky Country, with its fiercely independent residents and its spectacular natural resources. Despite the setting, however, the novel is extremely dark, filled with tormented, if not tortured, characters, all of whom are at the mercy of forces they cannot control. Extreme coincidence guides much of the action here, and though there are a few hints that one or two characters may, in time, set their lives in order, most "want their enemies hosed down with a flamethrower." Long biographies of the many individual characters provide their unfortunate backgrounds and suggest reasons for their violent behavior, though they do not do not explain the rare glimpses of empathy we see in some characters.

A climactic scene of non-stop action, killing, and near death experiences attempts to show the ultimate connections among the characters and the plot lines, but the author never explains how some of the characters actually extricate themselves from the critical scene. Even Dave Robicheaux, the narrator, admits, "In truth, I cannot tell you with any exactitude what happened [that night]." Somehow, after following so many damaged characters and complex plot lines for four hundred pages, I expected a little more. Mary Whipple


 
Entertainment Shop | Games And Consoles | Gadgets And Toys | Bargain Book Store | Man Utd Shop | Beatles Shop | Oasis Shop | CD Shop | Ricky Gervais Shop
Save Index | Discount Codes and Vouchers | Cashback World | Mobile Phone Price Checker | Latest Mobile Offers | Best Broadband Providers | Price Comparison

All design and layout copyright © The Bargain Book Shop unless otherwise stated. All product images copyright � their respective owners.

All products listed on The Bargain Book Shop website are processed by Amazon.co.uk so you can enjoy a fast and secure payment transaction. Please click here to contact Amazon.

The Bargain Book Store: New releases, used, bestsellers, autobiographies, romance, audio CDs, audio casettes and more!