Bitterroot

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Authors: James Lee Burke

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POCKET STAR BOOKS

Bitterroot
Billy Bob Holland [1]
James Lee Burke
Simon Schuster (2001)
Tags: Mystery
Mysteryttt

Amazon.com Review

Ex-Texas Rangers are suckers for old friends in distress, so when Vietnam vet and recent widower Doc Voss calls lawyer Billy Bob Holland from Montana with an apparently innocent invitation to visit, Billy Bob packs up and "head[s] north with creel and fly rod in the foolish hope that somehow my own ghosts did not cross state lines."

Doc has managed to alienate everyone in town, including mining interests on the Blackfoot River; a drug-running biker gang; an enclave of white supremacists, led by slimy Carl Hinkel; the local mob connection, in the person of an even slimier Nicki Molinari; and the feds, who don't want anything interfering with their pursuit of both Hinkel and Molinari. After Doc's daughter is brutally raped by three of the bikers, and those three are murdered in a particularly nasty fashion, Holland must try to clear his friend of suspicion. As he ferrets through a tangled web of coincidence and connection, Holland risks losing everything and everyone dear to him.

The wild card in the pack is Wyatt Dixon, a psychopathic ex-con who holds Holland responsible for his sister's death, and who has followed him to Montana: "[Wyatt] recycled pain, stored its memory, footnoted every instance of it in his life and the manner in which it had been visited upon him, then paid back his enemies and tormentors in ways they never foresaw."

James Lee Burke's prose alternately sparkles with a perverse insouciance ("Lamar had gotten his. Big time. Soaked in paint thinner and flame-roasted from head to foot like a burned burrito.") and glows with a muted intensity ("I closed the door and slipped the bolt and went back to sleep and hoped that the sun would rise on a better world for all of us."). The author's capacity to add depth to his characters with a few well-chosen phrases remains striking: the town sheriff walks "heavily, like a man who knew his knowledge of the world would never have an influence upon it"; a group of college boys is "suntanned and hard-muscled, innocently secure in the knowledge that membership in a group of people such as themselves meant that age and mortality would never hold sway in their lives."

Is the Billy Bob Holland series (three novels and counting) just
Robicheaux Redux
? The ex-Texas Ranger is, as either man might admit, the spittin' image of Dave Robicheaux, Burke's Louisiana PI: simultaneously rugged and rage-filled, chivalrous and callow, debonair and disturbing. And like the Robicheaux series, the Holland novels drift effortlessly among genres: regional writing, gritty noir, classic PI. You can cavil that Burke is repeating himself--or you can rejoice that Burke is continuing to enlarge his pool of intense, lyrical crime novels. Personally, I plump for the latter.
--Kelly Flynn

From Publishers Weekly

A two-time Edgar Award winner, Burke touches on a variety of hot-button issues sure to thrill his fans in his first book since last year's Purple Cane Road. The author's popular protagonist, Texas attorney Billy Bob Holland, travels to big sky country for some fishing with Doc Voss, a friend who's relocated to Montana's Bitterroot Valley after his wife's death. Soaring descriptions of the majestic setting contrast sharply with the evil doings of the people who live there. Doc has made some powerful enemies in his campaign against a mining venture he believes would harm the economy and the pristine countryside. The stakes rise when his teenage daughter is raped in her bedroom. The rapists could be any of the white supremacists who live in the woods, randy bikers on the prowl, strange members of a conservative religious cult or even the Native Americans eking out a substandard living on the local reservation. Billy Bob and Doc also have to contend with celebrities wanting to experience "country life," organized crime figures, government agents and a sinister, recently paroled felon who blames Billy Bob for his wife's death. To top it off, Billy Bob suffers from guilt over the accidental killing of his best friend as well as nightmarish memories of Vietnam. It's only a matter of time before the powder keg blows. Those who relish Burke's patented mix of supercharged violence and overheated passions are in for a treat. (June 18)Forecast: While not quite in the same league as Purple Cane Road, this entry is likely to scale bestseller lists as well.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

 

 

Bitterroot: A Billy Bob Holland Novel
Billy Bob Holland [3]
James Lee Burke
Simon Schuster (2001)
Rating:
★★★☆☆
Tags:
Fiction, General, Mystery Detective - General, Mystery, Suspense, Private Investigators, Montana, Vietnam War; 1961-1975, Vietnamese Conflict; 1961-1975, Holland; Billy Bob (Fictitious Character)
Fictionttt Generalttt Mystery Detective - Generalttt Mysteryttt Suspensettt Private Investigatorsttt Montanattt Vietnam War; 1961-1975ttt Vietnamese Conflict; 1961-1975ttt Holland; Billy Bob (Fictitious Character)ttt

Amazon.com Review

Ex-Texas Rangers are suckers for old friends in distress, so when Vietnam vet and recent widower Doc Voss calls lawyer Billy Bob Holland from Montana with an apparently innocent invitation to visit, Billy Bob packs up and “head[s] north with creel and fly rod in the foolish hope that somehow my own ghosts did not cross state lines.”

Doc has managed to alienate everyone in town, including mining interests on the Blackfoot River; a drug-running biker gang; an enclave of white supremacists, led by slimy Carl Hinkel; the local mob connection, in the person of an even slimier Nicki Molinari; and the feds, who don’t want anything interfering with their pursuit of both Hinkel and Molinari. After Doc’s daughter is brutally raped by three of the bikers, and those three are murdered in a particularly nasty fashion, Holland must try to clear his friend of suspicion. As he ferrets through a tangled web of coincidence and connection, Holland risks losing everything and everyone dear to him.

The wild card in the pack is Wyatt Dixon, a psychopathic ex-con who holds Holland responsible for his sister’s death, and who has followed him to Montana: “[Wyatt] recycled pain, stored its memory, footnoted every instance of it in his life and the manner in which it had been visited upon him, then paid back his enemies and tormentors in ways they never foresaw.”

James Lee Burke’s prose alternately sparkles with a perverse insouciance (“Lamar had gotten his. Big time. Soaked in paint thinner and flame-roasted from head to foot like a burned burrito.”) and glows with a muted intensity (“I closed the door and slipped the bolt and went back to sleep and hoped that the sun would rise on a better world for all of us.”). The author’s capacity to add depth to his characters with a few well-chosen phrases remains striking: the town sheriff walks “heavily, like a man who knew his knowledge of the world would never have an influence upon it”; a group of college boys is “suntanned and hard-muscled, innocently secure in the knowledge that membership in a group of people such as themselves meant that age and mortality would never hold sway in their lives.”

Is the Billy Bob Holland series (three novels and counting) just
Robicheaux Redux
? The ex-Texas Ranger is, as either man might admit, the spittin’ image of Dave Robicheaux, Burke’s Louisiana PI: simultaneously rugged and rage-filled, chivalrous and callow, debonair and disturbing. And like the Robicheaux series, the Holland novels drift effortlessly among genres: regional writing, gritty noir, classic PI. You can cavil that Burke is repeating himself—or you can rejoice that Burke is continuing to enlarge his pool of intense, lyrical crime novels. Personally, I plump for the latter.
—Kelly Flynn

From Publishers Weekly

A two-time Edgar Award winner, Burke touches on a variety of hot-button issues sure to thrill his fans in his first book since last year’s Purple Cane Road. The author’s popular protagonist, Texas attorney Billy Bob Holland, travels to big sky country for some fishing with Doc Voss, a friend who’s relocated to Montana’s Bitterroot Valley after his wife’s death. Soaring descriptions of the majestic setting contrast sharply with the evil doings of the people who live there. Doc has made some powerful enemies in his campaign against a mining venture he believes would harm the economy and the pristine countryside. The stakes rise when his teenage daughter is raped in her bedroom. The rapists could be any of the white supremacists who live in the woods, randy bikers on the prowl, strange members of a conservative religious cult or even the Native Americans eking out a substandard living on the local reservation. Billy Bob and Doc also have to contend with celebrities wanting to experience “country life,” organized crime figures, government agents and a sinister, recently paroled felon who blames Billy Bob for his wife’s death. To top it off, Billy Bob suffers from guilt over the accidental killing of his best friend as well as nightmarish memories of Vietnam. It’s only a matter of time before the powder keg blows. Those who relish Burke’s patented mix of supercharged violence and overheated passions are in for a treat. (June 18)Forecast: While not quite in the same league as Purple Cane Road, this entry is likely to scale bestseller lists as well.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

Scanned & Semi-Proofed by Cozette

 

 

Bitterroot

James Lee Burke

 

 

Big Sky country.

Billy Bob Holland has come to Montana’s Bitterroot Valley to help an old friend in need. But against the rugged, wide-open vistas, it is Billy Bob who is targeted for big trouble.  

Wyatt Dixon, a prison parolee, believes the former Texas Ranger caused his imprisonment and his sister’s death-and he is intent on exacting a deadly revenge.

But Billy Bob, tormented by the mistakes of his past, will be a formidable opponent as he, too, sets out to make things-all things-right.

 

 

Critical acclaim for James Lee Burke’s
New York Times
bestseller featuring
former Texas Ranger Billy Bob Holland
   - 
BITTERROOT

 

 

“Beautifully crafted prose…the best dialogue this side of Eimore Leonard.”

-Entertainment Weekly

 

“Billy Bob already looks like a mythic hero in the making. ”

-The New York Times Book Review

 

“A perilous tale of conspiracy, revenge, and the psychopaths whom Burke describes as individuals who are never at home in the world… . Well-written, color-fully wrought.”                                           
-USA Today

 

“I woke up at 4 in the morning to finish it off in a second sitting.”


The Washington Post

 

“No one is more adept at making poetry of fly fishing, of light, shade, and wind upon the waters of trout-rich Montana or sluggish Louisiana, and few can match Burke in describing sudden violence.”


The Boston Globe

 

“In
BITTERROOT,
Burke shows why he is the top mystery writer of this era… . When James Lee Burke writes, it is the journey that matters—the joy comes from the reading.”  

—Gannett News Service

 

“Burke’s lyrical style, unique among today’s mystery writers, remains, blessedly, the same. Which means brilliant.”  


San Diego Union- lrwune

 

“BITTERROOT,
like all of Burke’s novels, provides a history lesson in American violence… . And that’s why Burke’s novels have this terrific staying power— they are haunted by history, alive with beautiful writing, and deeply serious in intent.”


The Times-Picayune
(New Orleans)

 

“Burke masterfully weaves all the characters and plots into a sleep-stealing thriller that disappoints only in that you know it eventually must end.”


The Denver Post

 

 

BY THE SAME AUTHOR

Purple Cane Road

Heartwood

Lay Down My Sword and Shield

Sunset Limited

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