
Sunset Limited
A Dave Robicheaux Novel, Book 10
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Narrated by:
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Mark Hammer
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By:
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James Lee Burke
Detective Dave Robicheaux returns to center stage in an incendiary new novel by James Lee Burke. A gripping tale of racial violence, class warfare, and the sometimes cruel legacy of Southern history, Sunset Limited is a stunning achievement, confirming Burke's place as one of America's premier stylists as well as master storytellers.
The 40-year-old crucifixion of a prominent labor leader named Jack Flynn remains an unsolved atrocity that has never been forgotten in New Iberia, Louisiana. When Flynn's daughter, Megan, a photojournalist drawn to controversial subjects, returns to the site of her father's murder, it quickly becomes clear that her family's blood-stained past will not stay buried. Megan gives her old friend Dave Robicheaux a tip about a small-time criminal named Cool Breeze Broussard, scarcely suspecting that the seemingly innocuous case will lead Robicheaux and his partner into the midst of a deadly conspiracy.
Combining brilliant prose, crackling suspense, and an exquisite sense of character and place, Sunset Limited is a wrenching tale of historic violence and soiled redemption that reveals one of America's finest novelists at his masterful best.
©1998 James Lee Burke (P)2012 Simon & SchusterListeners also enjoyed...




















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Any additional comments?
James Lee Burke is far and away my favorite writer. His books are always entertaining and thought-provoking and his characters and settings are more real than those of any other author. This not my favorite of his books, but still excellent and better than a book by anyone else.Burke is Always Good
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Hammer made it difficult to listen...
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Story interesting. Kept my attention throughout. Typical JLB.
Much better than reviews gave it credit for.
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Would you try another book from James Lee Burke and/or Mark Hammer and Will Patton ?
Here in lies the problem. I love the James Lee Burke novels and especially the Dave Robicheau series but............. Mark Hammer is not the person that should be reading this book. He's terrible and brings boredom and a lack of voices to the characters. I was very disappointed in his abilities. Will Patton on the other hand makes the books come alive. He is Dave Robicheau and Clete Purcell and a difference voice for each character. When Will Patton reads the books I will be happy to buy them..... Mark Hammer is a different story.What other book might you compare Sunset Limited to and why?
NoneHow did the narrator detract from the book?
Mark Hammer is a terrible narraterWas Sunset Limited worth the listening time?
NoAny additional comments?
NoDave Robicheau
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Good Ole Dave
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YAWN or just Aok
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What made the experience of listening to Sunset Limited the most enjoyable?
I enjoy all of the Dave Robicheaux series.What about Mark Hammer and Will Patton ’s performance did you like?
Their southern "drawls"Any additional comments?
Can't wait until James Lee Burke continues with the Dave Robicheaux series. Need some new stuff.DAVE DOES IT AGAIN
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Strong story
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But in 'Sunset Limited' I began to find what was an engaging eccentricity in Robicheaux's internal monologues to have grown into an oddness bordering upon a distracting contradiction. Dave is presented to us as a simple cop: man-of-the-people, back-country moralist with a deep bayou accent and deeper back-countrty mind-set.
So how does one account for the intellectualism of his analogies? For example I was startled to here one made in this novel between the characters around him and Sir Toby Belch from Shakespeare's Twelfth Night! I know that Robicheaux attended a blue collar college, and yet he brings the critical analysis of a professor of literature to bear upon his reactions to story points. Toby Belch?? And his inner vocabulary as he analyzes his dreams, presents his imaginings, and details histories is rich as a tenured faculty member's and simultaneously littered, even driven, with Jungian archetypes.
So many of these, well, homilies, are now plunked into the stories that I'm feeling like a guy asked to buy a mine that some seller's shot-up with a shotgun loaded with tiny gold shavings. They call that "salting" and sellers who do that get into trouble with the law.
I'll read the next in this series… and I can recommend that you buy this one… but I can't recommend it with the enthusiasm that I had for say, "In the Electric Mist with Confederate Dead". But still, as a tribute to the late Mark Hammer, it's worth hearing.
Toby Belch and Filler? Not Burke's best.
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Sunset limited - good but not the best
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