
Review: SALT RIVER (Walker & Company 2007)
Author: James Sallis
SALT RIVER finds its ex-cop/ex-con/ex-therapist protagonist John Turner serving as de facto sheriff of the small town outside Memphis that he's come to think of as home (the actual sheriff, Lonnie Bates having, for all intents and purposes, retired). The town, however, has succumbed to the ravages of time and decay. Like so many other people and things in Turner's life, the place is dying.
An auto accident involving Bates' wayward son is the inciting event for this story, which (as with the previous Turner books) serves as more of an excuse for conjuring up the ghosts of Turner's past than a traditional narrative. However, a narrative is implied within the scenarios cobbled together in this book – some from Turner's experiences as a therapist, some from his time in prison, others involving various people and situations in the present.
The mystery storyline, such as it is, comes out in fits and starts. In fact, the plot details emerge almost at random, appropos perhaps for a series that emphasizes life's random qualities.
Read the rest at: http://mysterycrimefiction.suite101.com/article.cfm/review_salt_river





2 comments:
This is one trilogy I'm going to have to check out...
I knew I wouldn't have to go through too many of your recs before I came to a must buy!
Signed,
Jenny
Who Has Recently Made It Through Her TBR Pile
Thanks, Jenny!
The Turner Trilogy was a great achievement on Sallis' part. Highly literate reading, with all the excitement of good crime fiction. I'd recommend reading them in order.
PS--Wish I could say the same about my TBR list. :)
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