Vintage Crime/Black Lizard
Devil Red
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Hap and Leonard is now a Sundance TV series starring James Purefoy and Michael Kenneth Williams.
If there's one thing Hap Collins and Leonard Pine like, it's trouble--and they especially like getting paid to find it. So when their friend and sometime boss Marvin Harmon asks the boys to look into a cold-case double homicide, they're happy to oblige. It turns out that both victims were set to inherit some serious money, and one of them ran with an honest-to-goodness vampire cult. The more closely Hap and Leonard look over the crime-scene photos, the more trouble they see. The image of a red devil's head painted on a tree is just the beginning--a little research turns up a slew of murders with that same fiendish signature. And if things aren't weird enough, Leonard has taken to wearing a deestalker cap . . . Will this be the case that finally sends Hap over the edge?Share
Book Details
ISBN:
9780307455468
EAN:
9780307455468
Binding:
Paperback
Pages:
224
Authors:
Joe R Lansdale
Publisher:
Vintage Crime/Black Lizard
Published Date: 2012-06-03
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I admit that I am biased, Hap and Leonard is one of my favorites. This book did not disappoint me!
Always a fun ride. Joe makes you feel like youβre right there with them. Itβs hard to put down and a downer when itβs done. Reading Joe R. Lansdale gets my blood pumpin and my feet thumping.
Another episode of my favorite duo attempting to right the wrongs done to good people by the evil spawn of society. Mission accomplished with extreme prejudice along with a liberal dose of Hap & Leonard's off brand humor. I love reading about the exploits of these guys.Buy it, read it and enjoy!!ππΎπ₯ππΎπ₯ππΎπ₯ππΎπ₯ππΎπ₯
It's been a joy reading Joe R. Lansdale over the years. He has mellowed and matured in such a way that the simple sensory details, the crunch of snow, the heat of vengeance all bare the proper significance to both characters and audience. He's always been one of the finest storytellers to see publication in the last thirty years, now he is becoming an author who will be taught in English classes thirty years from now. Plus Hap and Leonard ROCK!
The other day, I was raving about Joe Lansdaleβs wonderful Hap and Leonard books (Lansdaleβs neo-noir series about two best friends living in Texas and the various, shall we say, incidents that arise in their lives) and talking about how I hope the new TV series gets the books more readers. Someone responded to me that they really wanted to, but they just couldnβt handle another series right now.Not to worry, I explained; the Hap and Leonard books are essentially standalone cases; while some supporting characters and some emotional ramifications carry over from book to book, you can pretty much read each one on its own. Indeed, I explained, I love to space them out, treat each one as a little gift to myself when I need a dose of Lansdaleβs hilarious dialogue, rich characters, and more than anything, more time with Hap Collins and Leonard Pine, two of my favorite characters in books these days. (Itβs to Lansdaleβs credit that the central dynamic of the book β that Hap is a straight, white former Vietnam war protester who served time for being a conscientious objector, while Leonard is a gay black Vietnam vet, never feels like a contrivance or a hook; instead, the two men just feel like old friends, and Lansdale never lets that friendship be anything less than the central relationship in their lives.)All of which is a long leadup to saying that, for the first time, Devil Red feels not like a standalone adventure in Hap and Leonardβs lives, but rather, a continuation of an earlier one; itβs a book that feels less like the newest entry in the series, and more like part two of the previous book, Vanilla Ride. And while thatβs not entirely a bad thing, it definitely makes Devil Red a little less satisfying on its own terms.Mind you, this is still Lansdale, and still Hap and Leonard, with all of the joys that that brings with it. (An ongoing character beat involving Leonardβs new choice of headgear never gets any less funny; in fact, it only gets better and better as the novel continues.) And in some ways, the choice to continue on after Vanilla Ride allows Lansdale to follow some intriguing threads β most notably, Hapβs efforts to come to terms with the violence he has been doling out in this series, and how it conflicts β or worse, maybe doesnβt conflict β with the pacifistic beliefs he claims to hold. In Lansdaleβs hands, Devil Red ends up being a fantastic exploration of Hap, and how far heβs come over the course of this series β and whether he wants to be that person or not. Whatβs more, it allows the final quarter of the book β in which Lansdale does something truly shocking for this series, in many ways β to function not only as a climax for the series, but to build off of all of the tensions and violence thatβs come before it, and deliver a character-driven payoff thatβs far more satisfying as a long-time reader than it might be on its own terms.Nonetheless, Devil Red doesnβt quite hold its own against the best entries in the series. More than anything else, the plot here feels a bit perfunctory and threadbare; what starts as an intriguing mystery turns out to not have much meat on the bones, and without the twists and turns that Lansdale is so good at (to say nothing of how this entry lacks the usual rich subtext that Lansdale so often brings), it feels a bit less colorful and fun than his best works. Is it still a fun read? Of course β I donβt think Lansdale is capable of anything less than that, and that goes doubly when Hap and Leonard are around. But it doesnβt compare to the peaks of the series, and feels more like an extended epilogue than a true standalone novel.Itβs still a blast, though.