Bitterroot
Bitterroot book cover

Bitterroot

Audio Cassette – Audiobook, June 1, 2001

Price
$15.47
Publisher
Simon & Schuster Audio
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0743504805
Dimensions
4.15 x 1.15 x 7 inches
Weight
6.4 ounces

Description

From Library Journal How many bad guys can you fit into one crime novel? Too many, in the case of Bitterroot, Burke's latest Billy Bob Holland episode set in Missoula, MT. Violent bikers, West Coast mobsters, paramilitary types, indifferent agents of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, and corrupt mining company personnel all figure into this rather confusing and disjointed plot. The abridged format probably aggravates the problem. As usual, the author paints vivid pictures: his descriptions enable listeners to see the Montana scenery and feel emotions with the characters, who are interesting and complex. Narrator Will Patton effectively captures the mood of the book. Burke fans will want this, despite its flaws. Recommended for suspense/ mystery collections where Burke is popular. Christine Valentine, Davenport Univ., Kalamazoo, MICopyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc. James Lee Burke, a rare winner of two Edgar Awards, is the author of twenty previous novels, including The New York Times bestsellers Sunset Limited, Cimarron Rose, Cadillac Jukebox, Burning Angel, Dixie City Jam, and Purple Cane Road. He lives with his wife in Missoula, Montana, and New Iberia, Louisiana. From AudioFile Billy Bob Holland, attorney-at-law and ex-Texas Ranger, is vacationing in Bitterroot, Montana, at the home of longtime friend Doc and his daughter, Maisy. As they enjoy the beautiful landscape, Wyatt Dixon, a sadistic killer, is released from jail in Texas and arrives in Montana to harass Holland and seek revenge. Rape, murder, and revenge haunt this mystery as Burke's creations grow from caricatures to full-bodied characters. Will Patton's soft Southern intonation hides the power and brutality of the characters at the same time that it brings Burke's vivid descriptions to the fore. The intermingling of the beautiful and the horrific adds to the wonder that such a place of peace has violence and murder lurking beneath its surface. M.B.K. © AudioFile 2001, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Texas attorney Billy Bob Holland heads to Montana to help his old friend, fellow Vietnam veteran Doc Voss, battle a ruthless local mining company whose operations are devastating the community, unaware that one of his opponents is recent parolee Wyatt Dixon, a man with revenge in his heart and a deadly plan for Holland. Read by Will Paton.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(383)
★★★★
25%
(319)
★★★
15%
(191)
★★
7%
(89)
23%
(294)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Misfits Portrayed in Elegant Prose

Burke's eye sees details few of us would ever notice, and he finds words that will make you feel that you're looking at a photograph of what he just saw. His characters come to life shaped by descriptions that are both sharp and flowing and always on the mark. I still like the Dave Robicheaux stories better (not wild about Billy Bob Holland in "Heartwood"), but "Bitterroot" proves that Burke can build a winner around either character.
Burke develops more than a dozen characters well enough for his audience to feel what each is about. While the characters themselves seem real, their collective baggage and violent tendencies do take the story down a peg. Think about how the following characters might interact in a story, then discover how Burke weaves their lives together when they converge in the Bitterroot Valley:
Billy Bob Holland, lawyer from Deaf Smith, Texas now in Montana to help his friend Doc Voss. Billy Bob frequently talks with the ghost of L.Q. Navarro, the partner he accidentally killed when they were both Texas Rangers, L.Q.'s voice often warning him of peril ahead. Son Lucas and investigator Temple Carroll from prior novels show up about halfway through this one.
Doc Voss, a quiet, brainy boy from Deaf Smith who was a Navy Seal in Nam and is now a single father in Montana with strong environmentalist beliefs.
Lamar Ellison, an ex-con scum of the earth biker who's working undercover for the ATF.
Wyatt Dixon, a psycho rodeo clown just out of prison who's not afraid of anything.
Terry Witherspoon, a kid from NC who's great with a knife, was Wyatt's punk in prison and is still under his spell.
Carl Hinkle, a white supremacist who supports and manipulates Ellison, Dixon and the like.
Some ATF and FBI types looking for a group behind Oklahoma City whom they will nail at any cost.
Sue Lynn Big Medicine, the Indian girl with a dark past who is being squeezed by the ATF on an overblown robbery charge.
Cleo Lonnigan, cold hearted sharpshooting widow of an investment guy who was working with the mob and got their son killed.
Nicki Molinari, the Arizona mob guy with a branch in Montana who loves baseball and peppers his victims with balls from his pitching machine rather than break their legs with a bat.
Xavier Girard the big time author writing a book about Nicki and his actress wife Holly who grew up with Nicki and is still openly intimate with him.
Finally Sheriff J.T. Cain, who is often hostile to Billy Bob and Doc but may be the only other fair-minded man in the Valley.
Net, net - I love the way Burke writes and the characters he creates, but there's just a little too much evil and depravity in the plot to give it 5 stars.
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