James Lee Burke

In 1987, after having only one book published in fifteen years, James Lee Burke, at the suggestion of a friend, turned to James Lee Burjewriting crime fiction. In The Neon Rain, Burke introduced the world to a Cajun recovering alcoholic police detective named Dave Robicheaux and launched his career as a bestselling author. The first Robicheaux novel I read was the 1989 Edgar Award winning novel Black Cherry Blues. From that novel:

“. . . I had found the edge. The place where you unstrap all your fastenings to the earth, to what you are what you have been, where you flame out on the edge of the spheres, and the sun and moon become eclipsed and the world below is as dead and remote and without interest as if it were glazed with ice. ”
— James Lee Burke (Black Cherry Blues: A Dave Robicheaux Nove

After writing like that, I quickly went back and read The Neon Rain and Heaven’s Prisoner and in the last twenty years I’ve read all but one of the books. (Note to self – READ Burning Angel). The books are gritty and deal mostly with the underbelly of New Orleans and New Iberia Louisiana and while I’ve never been to New Iberia or New Orleans through  Burke’s words, I feel that I’ve traveled many a back road, driven across levees  and floated down many a Louisiana bayou and along the way I’ve watched as Dave chase his own personal demons, dealt with the murder of his  wife Annie,  friends who took the wrong turn and ended up on the wrong side of the law, the mob,  the CIA and just about every other kind of underbelly cretin you can think of!

Throughout the books,  Clete Purcell has always been by Dave’s his side usually taking things just a tad too far, like the time he poured cement into a mobster’s car.  While Bootsie Dave’s wife, Alafair and her three-legged raccoon Tripod, Batiste and the Bait and Tackle shop have oftentimes provided comfort and a safe haven for Dave.

Yes, the list of memories goes on and on, from conversations with General John B Hood (In the Electric Mist with Confederate Dead) in the Louisiana swamps, to the devastation from Hurricane Katrina in the The Tin Roof Blowdown and hopefully Mr Burke will keep creating those memorable characters and scenes for us for many more years. James Lee Burke is a national treasurer that any fan of crime fiction or just good fiction writing should read, and read, and read!!

Main Characterr: Dave Robicheaux, Hackberry Holland
Occupation: Detective
Location: New Iberia, New Orleans, LA

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James Lee Burke Books I’ve read…

Creole Belle (Dave Robicheaux, #19)
Feast Day of Fools (Hackberry Holland, #3)
The Glass Rainbow (Dave Robicheaux, #18)
Crusader’s Cross (Dave Robicheaux, #14)
Rain Gods (Hackberry Holland, #2)
Swan Peak (Dave Robicheaux, #17)
The Neon Rain (Dave Robicheaux, #1)
Black Cherry Blues (Dave Robicheaux, #3)
A Morning for Flamingos (Dave Robicheaux, #4)
A Stained White Radiance (Dave Robicheaux, #5)
Heaven’s Prisoners (Dave Robicheaux, #2)
In the Electric Mist With Confederate Dead (Dave Robicheaux, #6)
Dixie City Jam (Dave Robicheaux, #7)
Cadillac Jukebox (Dave Robicheaux, #9)
Sunset Limited (Dave Robicheaux, #10)
Purple Cane Road (Dave Robicheaux, #11)
Jolie Blon’s Bounce (Dave Robicheaux, #12)
Last Car To Elysian Fields (Dave Robicheaux, #13)
Pegasus Descending (Dave Robicheaux, #15)
The Tin Roof Blowdown (Dave Robicheaux, #16

Blog Posts

Cork O’Connor – William Kent Krueger

Cork O’Connor

📚 Discovering William Kent Krueger

William Kent Krueger is the author of a long-running series featuring ex-Sheriff, private investigator, husband, and father Cork O’Connor of Tamarack County, Minnesota.

Purgatory RidgeThe first book I read in the series was Purgatory Ridge. I thought it was one of the best books I had ever read. I quickly went back to the beginning and read Iron Lake and Boundary Waters. From that point on, I have kept up religiously with each new release. At the time of writing, Heaven’s Keep was the most recent — and perhaps the best yet.

What stands out in these books are the rich, believable characters — from Cork and his wife Jo to their kids and my personal favorite, Henry Meloux. Krueger’s writing is exceptional, and each book operates on several levels: gripping mysteries, personal relationships, and thoughtful exploration of Cork’s Ojibwe heritage.

Mercy FallsTwo of my favorites in the series are Mercy Falls and Copper River, where the storyline flows seamlessly across both novels. Krueger is easily an 11 on a scale of 1 to 10.

In praise of Red Knife:

“The Cork O’Connor mysteries are known for their rich characterizations and their complex stories with deep moral and emotional cores. This one is no exception… If you don’t know Cork O’Connor, get to know him now.”
Booklist

📚 William Kent Krueger: My Journey with Cork O’Connor & Beyond

I discovered William Kent Krueger back in 2010 when I picked up Purgatory Ridge — the third book in his Cork O’Connor series. It hit me hard: one of the best books I’d ever read. I quickly backtracked and read the first two, Iron Lake and Boundary Waters, and from then on, I was all in.

I’ve since read every single Cork O’Connor novel. Each one has continued to build on the rich landscape of northern Minnesota, the layered relationships within Cork’s family, and his ongoing dialogue between two worlds — law and justice, Irish and Ojibwe, past and future. The character of Henry Meloux remains a personal favorite.

Mercy FallsAmong my favorites are Mercy Falls and Copper River, which form a continuous arc — a rare and welcome feature in crime fiction. And at the time I wrote my first post about Krueger, I thought Heaven’s Keep might have been the best yet. It turns out there were many more just as good still to come.

For years, I put off reading Krueger’s standalone novels, unsure if they could live up to the series. But eventually, I gave in — and of course, I loved them. Ordinary Grace and The River We Remember are powerful, moving stories, told with the same grace and heart that defines his best Cork novels.

“The Cork O’Connor mysteries are known for their rich characterizations and their complex stories with deep moral and emotional cores. This one is no exception… If you don’t know Cork O’Connor, get to know him now.” — Booklist

Forty Words For Sorrow – Giles Blunt

Forty Words for Sorrow

Forty Words for Sorrow is the first Giles Blunt book I’ve read and the first book in the John Cardinal series. Set in Algonquin Bay Canada, John Cardinal is a former Toronto police officer now back on the force in his hometown. He is a former homicide detective who had been transferred out of the homicide division after he spent too much time on two missing children cases Katie Pine and Billy LaBelle.

When the mutilated body of Katie Pine is discovered in a block of ice in an abandoned mine shaft, Cardinal is transferred back to homicide and sets out to find the serial killer.

Cardinal is aided by Lise Delorme a former Special Investigator, who in fact is still investigating Cardinal! . Cardinal is  married with a daughter at Yale in the Master of Fine Arts program and a wife in a mental hospital and how he can afford both is part of the reason for Delorme’s investigation and Cardinal’s guilty conscience. Read more from Giles Blunt’s web page here

I thoroughly enjoyed the book, it was fast paced with some twists and turns as Cardinal and Delorme race to find and stop the killers. I liked both of the main characters Cardinal and Delorme.

The book won the 2001 Macallan CWA Silver Dagger award for the second best book in English by a British publisher and in my opinion it was well deserving of the award.

Now onto The Delicate Storm the second John Cardinal book!