Dans le Mississippi des années 1970, tout aurait dû séparer Larry Ott et Silas Jones : la classe sociale et la couleur de peau. Les deux adolescents sont pourtant devenus amis, jusqu'à ce que la disparition d'une jeune fille vienne bouleverser leurs existences. Vingt ans plus tard, Silas Jones revient sur les lieux de son enfance. Alors qu'il n'a aucune raison de reprendre contact avec Larry, une nouvelle tragédie les oblige à se confronter, ensemble, à un passé douloureux.
A travers le portrait croisé de ces deux hommes, l'auteur de La Culasse de l'enfer nous offre un roman magnifique...
B>WINNER OF THE CWA GOLD DAGGER AWARD FOR BEST CRIME NOVEL OF THE YEAR./b>br>Amos, Mississippi, is a quiet town. Silas Jones is its sole law enforcement officer. The last excitement here was nearly twenty years ago, when a teenage girl disappeared on a date with Larry Ott, Silas's one-time boyhood friend. The law couldn't prove Larry guilty, but Amos' residents have shunned him ever since.Then the town's peace is shattered when someone tries to kill the reclusive Ott, another young woman goes missing, and the town's drug dealer is murdered. Woven through the tautly written mystery is the unspoken secret that hangs over the lives of two men - one black, one white.Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter, winner of the CWA Gold Dagger Award for Best Crime Novel of the Year, is a masterful novel, sizzling with deep Southern menace.
Rarement un recueil de nouvelles aura été salué par tant d'éloges, évoquant les plus grands noms de la littérature : Faulkner, Hemingway, Carver. Tom Franklin appartient à cette lignée d'écrivains dont la voix singulière est imprégnée de l'atmosphère sombre et violente du Sud profond. Son Alabama natal est peuplé de chasseurs, pêcheurs, braconniers et pochards, ouvriers d'usine et agriculteurs. Englués dans des marécages pourrissants ou des rivières polluées, tous braconnent, chacun à leur manière. Ils réagissent parfois avec violence à la lente agonie d'un monde qui abandonne ses forêts luxuriantes et ses cours d'eau aux usines de pâtes à papier ou aux centrales électriques, et les entraîne inexorablement dans sa propre chute. Un univers sombre, violent et sans rédemption, hanté par l'image fantasmatique de l'Alaska, lointain symbole d'évasion et de pureté. Réédité pour la première fois vingt ans après sa parution, Braconniers mérite d'être redécouvert. L'auteur de La culasse de l'enfer, devenu un livre culte, fait déjà preuve d'un immense talent.
In 1897, an aspiring politician is mysteriously murdered in the rural area of Alabama known as Mitcham Beat. His outraged friends -- --mostly poor cotton farmers -- form a secret society, Hell-at-the-Breech, to punish the townspeople they believe responsible. The hooded members wage a bloody year-long campaign of terror that culminates in a massacre where the innocent suffer alongside the guilty. Caught in the maelstrom of the Mitcham war are four people: the aging sheriff sympathetic to both sides; the widowed midwife who delivered nearly every member of Hell-at-the-Breech; a ruthless detective who wages his own war against the gang; and a young store clerk who harbors a terrible secret. Based on incidents that occurred a few miles from the author''s childhood home, Hell at the Breech chronicles the events of dark days that led the people involved to discover their capacity for good, evil, or for both.
It''s 1911 and the townsfolk of Old Texas, Alabama, have had enough. Every Saturday night for a year, E. O. Smonk has been destroying property, killing livestock, seducing women, cheating and beating men, all from behind the twin barrels of his Winchester 45-70 caliber over-and-under rifle. Syphilitic, consumptive, gouty, and goitered--an expert with explosives and knives--Smonk hates horses, goats, and the Irish, and it''s high time he was stopped. But capturing old Smonk won''t be easy--and putting him on trial could have shocking and disastrous consequences, considering the terrible secret the citizens of Old Texas are hiding.
In ten stunning and bleak tales set in the woodlands, swamps, and chemical plants along the Alabama River, Tom Franklin stakes his claim as a fresh, original Southern voice. His lyric, deceptively simple prose conjures a world where the default setting is violence, a world of hunting and fishing, gambling and losing, drinking and poaching--a world most of us have never seen. In the chilling title novella (selected for the anthologies New Stories from the South: The Year's Best, 1999 and Best Mystery Stories of the Century ), three wild boys confront a mythic game warden as mysterious and deadly as the river they haunt. And, as a weathered, hand-painted sign reads: "Jesus is not coming;" This terrain isn't pretty, isn't for the weak of heart, but in these desperate, lost people, Franklin somehow finds the moments of grace that make them what they so abundantly are: human.
Mississippi, 1927. Gonflé par les pluies diluviennes, le fleuve menace de détruire les digues qui protègent la région et d'engloutir le petit hameau de Hobnob, où les agents fédéraux Ted Ingersoll et Ham Johnson enquêtent sur la disparition de deux collègues venus arrêter un trafiquant d'alcool.
Au coeur de ce paysage d'apocalypse, ils découvrent un bébé abandonné, qu'Ingersoll - lui-même orphelin - confie par hasard à Dixie Clay Holliver. Sans se douter que la jeune femme est le plus grand bootlegger du comté, et peut-être la dernière aussi à avoir vu les deux agents en vie.
In 1927, as rains swell the Mississippi, the river threatens to burst its banks and engulf everything in its path, including the tiny hamlet of Hobnob, where federal agents Ted Ingersoll and Ham Johnson arrive to investigate the disappearance of two fellow agents--and find a baby boy abandoned in the middle of a crime scene. Ingersoll finds a home for the infant with local woman Dixie Clay Holliver, unaware that she''s the best bootlegger in the county and has many tender and consequential secrets of her own. The Tilted World is an extraordinary tale of murder and moonshine, sandbagging and saboteurs, and a man and a woman who find unexpected love.
The breathtaking new novel from Tom Franklin, the Gold Dagger Award winning author, writing with his wife, prize-winning poet Beth Ann Fennelly