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New & Used, Discount Books The Tin Roof Blowdown: A Dave Robicheaux Novel: Book Search: Compare book price  The Tin Roof Blowdown: A Dave Robicheaux Novel
Author: James Lee Burke  

ISBN:  1416548483
Publisher: Simon & Schuster - 2007-07-17
Format: Hardcover
Book Details  Customer Reviews
More details from Amazon.com or Barnes&Noble.com


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Customer Reviews:
Soaked in atmosphere and full of detailed description     
Set in and around New Orleans during and following destructive hurricane Katrina, the Tin Roof Blowdown is a complex piece of crime fiction. Graphic descriptions of the terror and destruction wrought by Katrina, and frequent reminders of the ineptitude of the authorities in handling the tragedy, form the backdrop as the drama unfolds. Drama involving the disappearance of a young priest, the murder of a young black rapist and an innocent black teenager with the father of the rapist's victim being accused, and somehow the involvement of organised crime.

With the NOPD overwhelmed, Detective Dave Robicheaux is called in to investigate. As he works in the company of his old friend and ex-cop Clete Purcel, Robicheaux finds his own family comes under attack form a deranged .

Soaked in atmosphere and full of detailed description, and not fearing to make political comment, this is a thoroughly involving story. Part narrated by Robicheaux, and part related in the third person, a devise which while providing the full picture of events also provides a personal view on matters, we get a clear picture of the intricacies of the plot; and such is the skill of the writer that we not only see inside Robicheaux's mind, but we can actually hear his voice when he speaks.
Don't Waste My Time     
Amazon readers rate Burke very highly. In all honesty, I don't know why. What do they see of interest in New Orleans, anyway?

Tin Roof was my only experience with Burke's books - and it will be my last.

Between the dark subject matter and the crude narrative, I won't waste my money or my time!
The TinRoof Blowdown     
Great story line and characters - James Lee Burke just gets better and better. His research is excellent and I should know as I live in SW LA.
"I wasn't sure New Orleans would survive."     
(4.5 stars) James Lee Burke, whose Dave Robicheaux series epitomizes some of the cultural characteristics of New Orleans and its outlying parishes, reaches his peak in this novel set in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Robicheaux is a detective with the New Iberia Parish, outside of New Orleans, and he and his acquaintances, many of them well known to fans of Burke's novels, have been dramatically impacted by Katrina--those that are still alive, that is.

Artfully combining real stories and details of the Hurricane Katrina disaster with fictional, but seemingly accurate, details of several plot lines evolving from the anarchy of Katrina's wake, Burke creates a chilling and compelling novel which crosses boundaries and throws together people from all levels of New Orleans society--well-to-do suburbanites whose wealth may not all be from legitimate sources, hardworking people who have secrets, "rednecks" who feel entitled to their sometimes ill-gotten gains, and those who live on the fringes of society and feel lucky to be able to know where their next meal is coming from.

In this novel, several predators steal a small boat from a parish priest trying to hack through the roof of a church to save his parishioners, who are in the attic trying to escape the rising floodwaters. The priest, suffering from cancer and addicted to pain-killing drugs, is a long-time friend of Robicheaux and his alcoholic friend Clete Purcell, but the priest has vanished after his boat has been stolen. The boat, however, has been used later in a home invasion and robbery which has resulted in the shooting deaths of two of the perpetrators. The house, which belonged to a member of organized crime, was robbed of a stash of "blood diamonds," some cocaine, and a large amount of counterfeit money. Several neighbors, who may have witnessed the shootings, have seen "nothing." One of them is the father of a girl who was raped earlier by some of the perpetrators. Eventually, the criminals threaten Alafair, Robicheaux's adopted daughter, and Molly, Robicheaux's wife.

As the mystery and the relationships among the various characters become more complex, the violence and the body count increase. Some of the characters, including one of the "perps," elicit significant sympathy, even as justice--and payback--play out satisfactorily. Burke, as always, creates vibrant, carefully rendered descriptions, often devastatingly bleak, of the environment in which his characters must operate. In the process, he makes the personal aspects of Katrina's aftermath come alive. Well organized and well integrated with the real Katrina disaster, this novel may be Burke's most memorable creation. n Mary Whipple

Swan Peak: A Dave Robicheaux Novel
In the Electric Mist with Confederate Dead
A Morning for Flamingos
Heaven's Prisoners
Crusader's Cross: A Dave Robicheaux Novel (Dave Robicheaux Mysteries)

Just another vehicle for the media lies about Katrina and an insult to the people who lived it.     
Burke may have a moving and descriptive writing style, but this is FICTION, folks! The thought that this book gives an accurate telling of post- Katrina New Orleans is an insult to it's people and the people of the Gulf Coast who lived through the experience. I got tired of crossing out inaccuracies about the storm and the typical CNN- type interpertations of events and found myself yelling at the text.
If you are looking for some kind of insight or glimpse into the hardships of life during and after Huricane Katrina do NOT bother with this book. The Katrina story needs to be told by people who were actually on the ground, and nobody else. Nearly 100% of the population living in a 25 by 180-mile stretch of Gulf coast was affected at a life-altering level by this catastrophic storm, so you have plenty of people to go to for information.
My own town, Slidell, took the Western eye-wall of the storm, significantly damaging over 80% of our homes. Everybody we knew was either driven from their own damaged home or housing somebody who was. That was the way we all lived well into 2006 and even beyond. Our home was one of the flooded ones. We lived with some very dear friends in the interim, but our family, as well as most others, was scattered all over during these times to live and work. The work was dangerous, filthy, hard and depressing, but there was nothing for it- you just had to roll up your sleeves and dig in. And except for those who may have lost loved ones, I don't know anyone who does not feel they are living a more meaningful life because of their experiences during those months which seemed to turn into these past few years.
Oh, and here is a surprise, from time zero we ALL had the full support of our Federal, State and local governments; FEMA (yes, FEMA); President Bush; Governor Blanco and our Mayors; the National Guard; the Red Cross; countless citizens from out of State and out of Country in the forms of utility companies, Church aid, shelters, hotels who took the burden of housing thousands (aided by FEMA monies), schools across the country who enrolled our students and made them welcome; WONDERFUL, WONDERFUL friends and family from all over the globe who gave help and comfort; and the list goes ever on. To you all, THANK YOU!
Our National News Media, however, couldn't seem to get the story straight. The mis-coverage of Katrina was more devastating to the people of New Orleans and the Mississippi Gulf Coast than the storm itself. All the finger pointing that occurred in the news (which we only saw, read or heard about much later from family and friends-) was evil and is harmful to this day. In fact, the area may not fully recover in our lifetime because of all the lying and `politicking' that continues even now.

Think of it this way:
1. Try to evacuate Boston in 36 hours. You can't.
Mayor Nagan declared a mandatory evacuation and succeded in emptying our major metro area over 90% in only 36 hours. Of the few who stayed some felt they did not have the means to leave, others were just stubborn, some weren't paying much attention, some would not leave their pets, many stayed to do harm- (that is the only part of Burke's novel that rings true, that some stayed to do harm)- none expected to be trapped.

2. EVERYBODY who has lived in the New Orleans area for more than a year knows that the Superdome IS NOT AND NEVER WAS a Hurricane shelter. It is ONLY a place of LAST RESORT to ride out the storm- bring your own food, water and bedding for a couple of days. Nothing more. Again, NOBODY expected to be trapped. People actually drove their cars to the Superdome! Of course, these were flooded and all were trapped. The event was beyond human comprehension.

3. Day of the destruction, the President called our Governor to offer National Guard support. She said "not yet". The press reports how the Feds do not help- twisted lie. To give over your State to the Feds is a big decision- the Governor needed to assess the situation first. The trouble was that the catastrophe was so great people were either trapped or unable to get into areas to assess the situation- it all took time. And in that time lives were lost, there was nothing for it. That is why when you live in these areas they tell you over and over again- "If we declare a mandatory evacuation, WE CANNOT HELP YOU UNTIL THE CRISIS IS OVER." Everyone who lives there knows this fact, rich or poor.

4. And don't even bring up the levees and the Core of Engineers (who, by the way, was there to blue-roof all of our damaged homes). The levies failed because the storm was massive. If they were not as strong as they could have been, look to generations of locals who decided to divert Federal monies from levee improvements to other `more important' projects. Again- nobody ever believed a `Katrina' could actually happen.

The saddest truth of the matter is this-

The lies generated by the news media in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina did more damage to the people of New Orleans and the surrounding Gulf coast parishes than the storm surge and winds combined. James Lee Burke's novel, "The Tin Roof Blowdown" is just another vehicle for those lies. I threw it in the trash.

By the way, it didn't start raining till Sunday afternoon, that would be August 28, 2005.
Love This Book     
I stumbled upon my first Elvis Cole story earlier this year and ever since I have read five more. The Last Detective is fast moving and thrilling and I highly recommend it.
Five Stars from a first time Crais reader!!!     
This was my first Robert Crais book...he was recommended to me by my BFF who is an avid reader of his.

I live in L.A., so maybe that's why I connected with it so easily... but this was also just one of those books I could NOT bear to put down. His character Elvis had me so intrigued as to what lengths he would go to rescue that kidnapped boy, I just had to keep going with it!

It will be fun now too, to go back and see what I missed in Elvis' earlier adventures. Thanks Mr. Crais...well done!
Another Well Done Elvis Cole Novel     
THE LAST DETECTIVE is the ninth book in Robert Crais's "Elvis Cole" series dealing with the adventures of a private detective working in Los Angeles. While not nearly as great as LA REQUIEM, the prior installment, this is still a very well done thriller.

This is pretty much a kidnapping drama, involving the young son of Elvis Cole's girlfriend, Lucy Chenier. Soon after the boy is kidnapped, the kidnappers announce that they are kidnapping the child to pay Cole back for atrocities he committed in Vietnam. This plot development gives Crais an excuse to delve into Cole's childhood and his experiences as a young soldier. These flashback scenes, which really flesh out Cole as a character, are probably the best part of the novel.

THE LAST DETECTIVE has the same serious tone as LA REQUIEM, and lacks the cartoonish nature of the earlier Cole books. The writing is crisp, and Crais does a good job of ratcheting up the tension. The only major downside of this novel is that the final twist is highly predictable, and Crais gets a little too cute by sticking a character from another one of his novels (DEMOLITION ANGEL) in a thankless supporting role.

All things considered, THE LAST DETECTIVE is yet another solid entry in the Elvis Cole series. It's worth delving into, although I would recommend reading LA REQUIEM first, if you haven't already done so.
Elvis is Back!     
I love Crais' Elvis Cole mysteries. His stand alones are good, but his Cole mysteries are spectacular. In this one, Elvis is going without sleep to track down his girlfriend's son. Ben Chenier has been kidnapped while in Elvis' care and it seems to be connected to Elvis' past, but nothing is ever as it appears.

Joe Pike is back, too, recovered from his wounds from his previous adventure and trying to get back in the groove of investigations.

Tension builds quickly and stays taut all the way through.Don't miss the return of Elvis!

Soaked in atmosphere and full of detailed description     
Set in and around New Orleans during and following destructive hurricane Katrina, the Tin Roof Blowdown is a complex piece of crime fiction. Graphic descriptions of the terror and destruction wrought by Katrina, and frequent reminders of the ineptitude of the authorities in handling the tragedy, form the backdrop as the drama unfolds. Drama involving the disappearance of a young priest, the murder of a young black rapist and an innocent black teenager with the father of the rapist's victim being accused, and somehow the involvement of organised crime.

With the NOPD overwhelmed, Detective Dave Robicheaux is called in to investigate. As he works in the company of his old friend and ex-cop Clete Purcel, Robicheaux finds his own family comes under attack form a deranged .

Soaked in atmosphere and full of detailed description, and not fearing to make political comment, this is a thoroughly involving story. Part narrated by Robicheaux, and part related in the third person, a devise which while providing the full picture of events also provides a personal view on matters, we get a clear picture of the intricacies of the plot; and such is the skill of the writer that we not only see inside Robicheaux's mind, but we can actually hear his voice when he speaks.
Don't Waste My Time     
Amazon readers rate Burke very highly. In all honesty, I don't know why. What do they see of interest in New Orleans, anyway?

Tin Roof was my only experience with Burke's books - and it will be my last.

Between the dark subject matter and the crude narrative, I won't waste my money or my time!
The TinRoof Blowdown     
Great story line and characters - James Lee Burke just gets better and better. His research is excellent and I should know as I live in SW LA.
"I wasn't sure New Orleans would survive."     
(4.5 stars) James Lee Burke, whose Dave Robicheaux series epitomizes some of the cultural characteristics of New Orleans and its outlying parishes, reaches his peak in this novel set in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Robicheaux is a detective with the New Iberia Parish, outside of New Orleans, and he and his acquaintances, many of them well known to fans of Burke's novels, have been dramatically impacted by Katrina--those that are still alive, that is.

Artfully combining real stories and details of the Hurricane Katrina disaster with fictional, but seemingly accurate, details of several plot lines evolving from the anarchy of Katrina's wake, Burke creates a chilling and compelling novel which crosses boundaries and throws together people from all levels of New Orleans society--well-to-do suburbanites whose wealth may not all be from legitimate sources, hardworking people who have secrets, "rednecks" who feel entitled to their sometimes ill-gotten gains, and those who live on the fringes of society and feel lucky to be able to know where their next meal is coming from.

In this novel, several predators steal a small boat from a parish priest trying to hack through the roof of a church to save his parishioners, who are in the attic trying to escape the rising floodwaters. The priest, suffering from cancer and addicted to pain-killing drugs, is a long-time friend of Robicheaux and his alcoholic friend Clete Purcell, but the priest has vanished after his boat has been stolen. The boat, however, has been used later in a home invasion and robbery which has resulted in the shooting deaths of two of the perpetrators. The house, which belonged to a member of organized crime, was robbed of a stash of "blood diamonds," some cocaine, and a large amount of counterfeit money. Several neighbors, who may have witnessed the shootings, have seen "nothing." One of them is the father of a girl who was raped earlier by some of the perpetrators. Eventually, the criminals threaten Alafair, Robicheaux's adopted daughter, and Molly, Robicheaux's wife.

As the mystery and the relationships among the various characters become more complex, the violence and the body count increase. Some of the characters, including one of the "perps," elicit significant sympathy, even as justice--and payback--play out satisfactorily. Burke, as always, creates vibrant, carefully rendered descriptions, often devastatingly bleak, of the environment in which his characters must operate. In the process, he makes the personal aspects of Katrina's aftermath come alive. Well organized and well integrated with the real Katrina disaster, this novel may be Burke's most memorable creation. n Mary Whipple

Swan Peak: A Dave Robicheaux Novel
In the Electric Mist with Confederate Dead
A Morning for Flamingos
Heaven's Prisoners
Crusader's Cross: A Dave Robicheaux Novel (Dave Robicheaux Mysteries)

Just another vehicle for the media lies about Katrina and an insult to the people who lived it.     
Burke may have a moving and descriptive writing style, but this is FICTION, folks! The thought that this book gives an accurate telling of post- Katrina New Orleans is an insult to it's people and the people of the Gulf Coast who lived through the experience. I got tired of crossing out inaccuracies about the storm and the typical CNN- type interpertations of events and found myself yelling at the text.
If you are looking for some kind of insight or glimpse into the hardships of life during and after Huricane Katrina do NOT bother with this book. The Katrina story needs to be told by people who were actually on the ground, and nobody else. Nearly 100% of the population living in a 25 by 180-mile stretch of Gulf coast was affected at a life-altering level by this catastrophic storm, so you have plenty of people to go to for information.
My own town, Slidell, took the Western eye-wall of the storm, significantly damaging over 80% of our homes. Everybody we knew was either driven from their own damaged home or housing somebody who was. That was the way we all lived well into 2006 and even beyond. Our home was one of the flooded ones. We lived with some very dear friends in the interim, but our family, as well as most others, was scattered all over during these times to live and work. The work was dangerous, filthy, hard and depressing, but there was nothing for it- you just had to roll up your sleeves and dig in. And except for those who may have lost loved ones, I don't know anyone who does not feel they are living a more meaningful life because of their experiences during those months which seemed to turn into these past few years.
Oh, and here is a surprise, from time zero we ALL had the full support of our Federal, State and local governments; FEMA (yes, FEMA); President Bush; Governor Blanco and our Mayors; the National Guard; the Red Cross; countless citizens from out of State and out of Country in the forms of utility companies, Church aid, shelters, hotels who took the burden of housing thousands (aided by FEMA monies), schools across the country who enrolled our students and made them welcome; WONDERFUL, WONDERFUL friends and family from all over the globe who gave help and comfort; and the list goes ever on. To you all, THANK YOU!
Our National News Media, however, couldn't seem to get the story straight. The mis-coverage of Katrina was more devastating to the people of New Orleans and the Mississippi Gulf Coast than the storm itself. All the finger pointing that occurred in the news (which we only saw, read or heard about much later from family and friends-) was evil and is harmful to this day. In fact, the area may not fully recover in our lifetime because of all the lying and `politicking' that continues even now.

Think of it this way:
1. Try to evacuate Boston in 36 hours. You can't.
Mayor Nagan declared a mandatory evacuation and succeded in emptying our major metro area over 90% in only 36 hours. Of the few who stayed some felt they did not have the means to leave, others were just stubborn, some weren't paying much attention, some would not leave their pets, many stayed to do harm- (that is the only part of Burke's novel that rings true, that some stayed to do harm)- none expected to be trapped.

2. EVERYBODY who has lived in the New Orleans area for more than a year knows that the Superdome IS NOT AND NEVER WAS a Hurricane shelter. It is ONLY a place of LAST RESORT to ride out the storm- bring your own food, water and bedding for a couple of days. Nothing more. Again, NOBODY expected to be trapped. People actually drove their cars to the Superdome! Of course, these were flooded and all were trapped. The event was beyond human comprehension.

3. Day of the destruction, the President called our Governor to offer National Guard support. She said "not yet". The press reports how the Feds do not help- twisted lie. To give over your State to the Feds is a big decision- the Governor needed to assess the situation first. The trouble was that the catastrophe was so great people were either trapped or unable to get into areas to assess the situation- it all took time. And in that time lives were lost, there was nothing for it. That is why when you live in these areas they tell you over and over again- "If we declare a mandatory evacuation, WE CANNOT HELP YOU UNTIL THE CRISIS IS OVER." Everyone who lives there knows this fact, rich or poor.

4. And don't even bring up the levees and the Core of Engineers (who, by the way, was there to blue-roof all of our damaged homes). The levies failed because the storm was massive. If they were not as strong as they could have been, look to generations of locals who decided to divert Federal monies from levee improvements to other `more important' projects. Again- nobody ever believed a `Katrina' could actually happen.

The saddest truth of the matter is this-

The lies generated by the news media in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina did more damage to the people of New Orleans and the surrounding Gulf coast parishes than the storm surge and winds combined. James Lee Burke's novel, "The Tin Roof Blowdown" is just another vehicle for those lies. I threw it in the trash.

By the way, it didn't start raining till Sunday afternoon, that would be August 28, 2005.
Love This Book     
I stumbled upon my first Elvis Cole story earlier this year and ever since I have read five more. The Last Detective is fast moving and thrilling and I highly recommend it.
Five Stars from a first time Crais reader!!!     
This was my first Robert Crais book...he was recommended to me by my BFF who is an avid reader of his.

I live in L.A., so maybe that's why I connected with it so easily... but this was also just one of those books I could NOT bear to put down. His character Elvis had me so intrigued as to what lengths he would go to rescue that kidnapped boy, I just had to keep going with it!

It will be fun now too, to go back and see what I missed in Elvis' earlier adventures. Thanks Mr. Crais...well done!
Another Well Done Elvis Cole Novel     
THE LAST DETECTIVE is the ninth book in Robert Crais's "Elvis Cole" series dealing with the adventures of a private detective working in Los Angeles. While not nearly as great as LA REQUIEM, the prior installment, this is still a very well done thriller.

This is pretty much a kidnapping drama, involving the young son of Elvis Cole's girlfriend, Lucy Chenier. Soon after the boy is kidnapped, the kidnappers announce that they are kidnapping the child to pay Cole back for atrocities he committed in Vietnam. This plot development gives Crais an excuse to delve into Cole's childhood and his experiences as a young soldier. These flashback scenes, which really flesh out Cole as a character, are probably the best part of the novel.

THE LAST DETECTIVE has the same serious tone as LA REQUIEM, and lacks the cartoonish nature of the earlier Cole books. The writing is crisp, and Crais does a good job of ratcheting up the tension. The only major downside of this novel is that the final twist is highly predictable, and Crais gets a little too cute by sticking a character from another one of his novels (DEMOLITION ANGEL) in a thankless supporting role.

All things considered, THE LAST DETECTIVE is yet another solid entry in the Elvis Cole series. It's worth delving into, although I would recommend reading LA REQUIEM first, if you haven't already done so.
Elvis is Back!     
I love Crais' Elvis Cole mysteries. His stand alones are good, but his Cole mysteries are spectacular. In this one, Elvis is going without sleep to track down his girlfriend's son. Ben Chenier has been kidnapped while in Elvis' care and it seems to be connected to Elvis' past, but nothing is ever as it appears.

Joe Pike is back, too, recovered from his wounds from his previous adventure and trying to get back in the groove of investigations.

Tension builds quickly and stays taut all the way through.Don't miss the return of Elvis!

You can check more book detail and reviews from Amazon.com or Barnes&Noble.com


Editorial Reviews:
Elvis Cole is back...

With his acclaimed bestsellers, Hostage (a New York Times Notable Book) and Demolition Angel, Robert Crais drew raves for his unstoppable pacing, edgy characterizations, and cinematic prose. Now, in The Last Detective, Crais returns to his signature character, Los Angeles private investigator Elvis Cole, in a masterful page-turner that probes the meaning of family and the burdens of the past.

Elvis Cole's relationship with attorney Lucy Chenier is strained. When she moved from Louisiana to join Elvis in Los Angeles, she never dreamed that violence would so easily touch her life -- but then the unthinkable happens. While Lucy is away on business and her ten-year-old son, Ben, is staying with Elvis, Ben disappears without a trace. Desperate to believe that the boy has run away, evidence soon mounts to suggest a much darker scenario.

Joining forces with his enigmatic partner, Joe Pike, Elvis frantically searches for Ben with the help of LAPD Detective Carol Starkey, as Lucy's wealthy, oil-industry ex-husband attempts to wrest control of the investigation. Amid the maelstrom of personal conflicts, Elvis and Joe are forced to consider a more troubling lead -- one indicating that Ben's disappearance is connected to a terrible, long-held secret from Elvis Cole's past.

Venturing deep inside a complex psyche, Crais explores Elvis's need for family - the military that embraced him during a troubled adolescence, his rock-solid partnership with Pike, and his floundering relationship with Lucy - as they race the clock in their search for Ben. The Last Detective is Robert Crais' richest, most intense tale of suspense yet.
Don't start reading The Last Detective with much on your calendar. This tense, satisfying thriller will glue you to your chair, as private eye Elvis Cole--the star of eight previous Robert Crais novels, prior to the Cole-less Demolition Angel and Hostage--faces his toughest case: the abduction of his girlfriend's son, 10-year-old Ben Chenier, who was staying with Elvis when he was snatched.

Panic at Ben's disappearance turns to terror when the kidnapper phones to reveal his apparent motive, a dark secret from Elvis's past. But the plot thickens and twists, and then twists again, as Elvis and his longtime buddy, tough guy Joe Pike, race the clock against a group of villains as sinister as they are capable. The author mixes Elvis's first-person narration with third-person sections that describe other points of view--a risky technique, but Crais makes it work. He also does a fine job resurrecting the wisecracking Elvis of earlier books while imbuing him with a new depth and darkness.

This dazzlingly plotted, crisply told story is threaded with real detection (what a rarity!) and peopled by characters you can't help but care about--including Carol Starkey, the haunted bomb-squad cop from Demolition Angel, who's now a juvenile-abduction detective. Crais has long been getting better with each book, and The Last Detective continues the pattern. --Nicholas H. Allison

Editorial reviews and customer reviews are properties of Amazon.com and its respective owners.
You can check more book detail and reviews from Amazon.com
  

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