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Lay Down My Sword and Shield

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Lay Down My Sword and Shield

De: James Lee Burke
Narrado por: Will Patton
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The hero of James Lee Burke's recent best-seller Rain Gods, cousin to lawman Billy Bob Holland and a genuine product of the South, both old and new, Hackberry Holland makes his first appearance in this early gem from "America's best novelist" (The Denver Post).

Against the backdrop of growing civil rights turmoil in a sultry border town, the hard-drinking ex-POW attorney yields to the myriad urgings of his wife, his brother, and his so-called friends to make a bid for a congressional seat - and finds himself embroiled in the seamy world of Texas powerbrokers. And when Hack attempts to overturn an old army buddy's conviction, and crosses paths with a beautiful union organizer who speaks to his heart in a way no one else has, he finds both a new love and a new purpose as he breaks free from the shackles of wealth and expectation to bring justice to the underserved.

©2010 James Lee Burke (P)2010 Simon & Schuster
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Compelling Storyline • Complex Protagonist • Excellent Narration • Vivid Descriptions • Emotional Intensity
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The Publisher's summary reads like a romance novel when this is is classic James Lee Burke: Intellent story telling based on deep introspection and human nature. Dark poetry in hot, steamy Texas in the time when "Negro" was considered polite language and Hispanics were ignored. A preclude to Rain Gods, it explains many character mysteries and painful memories. Will Patton, the narrator, layers language with meaning and tonality like silk over callouses.

The Publisher's Summary is Anemic

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It is pretty difficult to forgive the self-destructive, often self-righteous subject of this powerful character study, at least until you have reached the promising denouement. Burke never soft pedals the negative aspects of Hackberry's alcoholism and self-hatred. What he does do is expose its roots in the Korean War back story, making us relive with Holland a soul destroying history in a visceral and horrifying series of memories. He does, nonetheless, have redeeming qualities even at his lowest points--a love for horses and a compassion for the helpless which he finds inescapable even while he is single-mindedly gunning the engine in his flight to his own annihilation. And a burning hatred for hypocrisy. In fact, it is this last which fuels his descent as his lingering sense of guilt concerning his final "failure" under North Korean torturers makes it impossible for him to wear a mask of respectability in the here and now.

This is not an easy book to read, and different auditors have obviously come away with widely divergent reactions. As for me, while I don't think this is Burke's finest work (that is a very high bar), I was able to engage deeply with Hack even while desperately wanting to slap him up side the head and lock him in his room. Even at his most repugnant, there was something there worth loving, and most of us have experienced that enough times in our lives to be able to relate. In addition, Burke's brilliantly poetic use of landscape and atmosphere is already in evidence in this early work. He also does a nice job of playing powerfully on the themes of hypocrisy and real cowardice which run throughout his later novels. By the last page, I was very satisfied and even moved.

I would not, however, recommend this as a first read in the Burke oeuvre. I would suggest you get to know the later Hackberry and come back to this as very interesting back story.

A character study--not a polemic or crime fiction

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as usual Mr Burke does a fantastic job of making the characters in the land and the ambiance Texas come to life and Mr Patton job of reading this book is beyond marvelous loved it loved it loved it

Love Mr.Burke and Mr. Patton,"BRAVO"!!!!!

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I moved to Texas in the fifties, as a high school student. This book makes you think about, what you just sailed through. What a great book club read. A late night and more wine, please to finish the discussion.#sweepsteaks#tagsgiving#historyjived
#eyesopen

A Look Back Through a New Lens

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While a powerful comparison of politics, civil rights and life in the South to a Korean prisoner of war camp, this book becomes one long nightmare. I haven't quite finished it yet, but the prolonged, painfully detailed, and seemingly endless descriptions of the brutality in the camp--down to the constant descriptions of the defecations, starvation, and bloody, bone-crunching horrors was just too much. Most of us have been alive long enough to have heard the gruesome details of such imprisonment, but having it constantly thrown at the reader, gory detail after gory detail for so very much of the book, was not necessary to use it as the metaphor it was.

Will Patton was great in his narration, but the vile nightmares of unimaginable cruelty totally dominated this book, and I never would have chosen it if I knew i would have to share every brutal moment of those continual nightmares.

I imagine it is much like an abused child who goes on to become an abuser. He went through the gutters of humanity in war, only to seek out the gutters of humanity in politics--particularly southern racist politics. And his remedy seemed to be self sedation via alcohol and $3 Mexican whores". I'm hoping an enlightenment will evolve, but so far, the author seems determined to keep us in the gutter with the prisoners.

The approach of comparing the cruelty and inhumanity of racism with the cruelty and inhumanity of war is compelling--but enough is enough. I'm on the fence about this author; and this will make me take a step back for awhile.

TMI!

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Don't expect this to be as intriguing an interesting as the Dave Robicheaux series. Maybe some people will love this book and will commended for being well written, which it was. Sadly though, the story was so boring at times I literally almost fell asleep. as usual Will Patton narrated the book absolutely perfectly.

Zzzzz

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Would you consider the audio edition of Lay Down My Sword and Shield to be better than the print version?

Yes

Any additional comments?

James Lee Burke should only let Will Patton read his books for him. His voice is smooth, with good ups and downs. Knows just where to put the right ? on the words. I could listen all day to Will Patton reading JLB books.
Great, keep them coming....faster.....

Love JLB

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The main character, Hackberry Holland, is a very difficult to like drunk through most of the book. If it had not been for Burke's descriptive prose and Patton's excellent reading, I doubt that I would have finished it. However, I stuck it out through the end, and I am glad I did. It is definitely worth reading if you are a fan of James Lee Burke, but it is not as good as his more recent work.

Will Patton's Performance Saves It

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There isn't anyone I know with a greater mastery of words. Always a visual vacatiosn.

Wonderful

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You can’t beat Will Patton serving up the poetry, cadence, and wisdom in James Lee’s work. Never have I heard a reader more suited to an author; no other reader can do Burke like Will does. Let me say right here — whenever at such time as my own paltry scribblings get public, please god, let Will Patton read them aloud, at least to my family and friends, under a cool gallery out front.

I love anything with the Holland clan, and this Hack was very interesting — a different kind of Holland. The section on his POW experience in Korea has to have been noted somewhere for its authenticity and strength of narrative. It is exemplary and should be excerpted in any book that recalls the horrible time that those men had in such camps.

James Lee Burke is a national Treasure. And so is Will Patton. This duo makes Texas seem like a new planet full of wonders, dangers, and moral challenges.

Is there any better lyrical western author?

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