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Synopsis After a very long hiatus, Hackberry Holland is back. Last heard from in LAY DOWN MY SWORD AND SHIELD (1971), Hack has since decided that after running the rat race as a lawyer and a politician, he wants a quieter life. So he takes over the sheriff's office in a little town in south Texas. Things are going pretty well until nine bodies turn up. Now he's got to unravel the organized-crime connections that have left these Asian prostitutes and drug-runners dead--which means he needs to track down and protect a pair of witnesses, as well as find the moralizing vigilante known as the Preacher who kills in creepily thoughtful ways. Solving these crimes--and preventing future ones--is made all the more difficult by the waves of people moving into Hack's territory in Hurricane Katrina's destructive wake
| Size | | Height: | 6.0 in | | Width: | 5.3 in | | Thickness: | 1.8 in | | Weight: | 12.0 oz |
Industry Reviews "Nearly every scene builds to a fine crescendo of tension...." (06/15/2009)
"Burke spins a tale replete with colorful prose and epic confrontations....The battle of wills and wits between Holland and Collins delivers everything Burke's fans expect." (06/01/2009)
"Burke fans will notice much that is familiar here--the lyricism, the minor key, the elegiac refrain--but the melody is new and haunting. And, besides you just have to love a guy with a name like Hackberry." (starred review)
"If James Lee Burke has the deepest regional voice in the genre--and I do believe that's so--it's because he understands those feelings that keep people connected to the places where they have, or once had, roots." (07/19/2009)
"As always, Burke's portrayal of the ugliness of human behavior set against the higher moral standards of those who fight evil is irresistible." (07/23/2009)
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