Reviews

Brasier noir: roman by Greg Iles

fraeyja's review against another edition

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dark mysterious slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? N/A
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0

jenmooremo's review against another edition

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5.0

Wow, just wow. Not since The Road have I gasped out loud reading a book and carried it everywhere to try to finish it, and not since The Story of Edgar Sawtelle have I never been happier to have picked up a book surely thicker than my forearm and never looked back. If you've ever spent time in the South, you know those characters could be walking amongst us and the stories they could but won't tell, that should send enough shivers up any reader's spine without reading the first chapter. My only complaint? Not all the questions were answered and I like closure, but I certainly understand why the author left things that way.

elwoodradley's review against another edition

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4.0

4.75 stars. EXCELLENT book. Had me hooked from the first chapter on. Can’t wait to read more Iles

k8helster's review against another edition

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4.0

This was a great book. Started fast and kept moving until about halfway through. I felt like there were so many angles at times the book dragged on — so many perspectives and characters. There were some unimaginable crimes I was left speechless throughout. Great writing.

lorienwen's review

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adventurous dark mysterious sad tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.5

mg_in_md_'s review against another edition

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3.0

This is part one of a trilogy that blends past crimes, lies, and secrets in Natchez, Mississippi. While the bulk of the story is set in present-day Natchez, flashbacks to 1960's Natchez are critical to understanding the modern day events. Mayor Penn Cage's father, Tom, a beloved family doctor, is accused of murdering Viola Turner, the beautiful nurse with whom he worked in the early 1960's. Penn does not believe his father could have murdered Viola and sets out to clear his name. As Penn and his fiancé dig into the story, ugly truths about the past and a possible connection to a vicious KKK crew known as the Double Eagles are unearthed. The closer they get to finding answers, the more dangerous the search becomes. While this is the first book I've read in this series (this is the fourth featuring Penn Cage), I did not feel lost not having read prior books in the series. I will likely read the next book in the trilogy to find out what happens next for Penn's father, Tom. I would give this a 3.5 star rating if I could and hope part two is equally entertaining.

phpatrickhiggins's review against another edition

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2.0

Why did I read this?

gaylebn's review against another edition

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5.0

A friend recommended this book and I really liked it. It's actually the fourth in a series featuring the main character, Penn Cage. He is the mayor of Natchez, MS in this book. I will go back and read the first Penn Cage novels after I read the fifth, which I have just started, and the sixth. Full of action, mystery, and suspense, it moves at a good rate.

chelaus0824's review against another edition

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5.0

I have been looking forward to this book since reading The Devils Punchbowl a few years ago. I must say I had built this book up so much in my mind, but I was not let down! Though it is a very long book, I zipped through it because I just HAD to find out what happened next!

I preordered the next book, The Bone Tree, before I even finished this one!

Great author, great book!

judithdcollins's review against another edition

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5.0

TOP 30 BOOKS OF 2014

Wow! While listening to this gripping, intense thriller NATCHEZ BURNING (Penn Cage #4) audiobook—I continued to ask myself, “why haven’t I read more of by Greg Iles”? Immediately, I begin checking my WANT TO READ LIST for all Iles’ Penn Cage Books in the Trilogy, which I missed, plus others to get the full details of Tom and Penn.

I highly recommend the audiobook, as you definitely get your money’s worth with (35 hrs./ 53 minutes) in 5 downloads of pure adrenaline, heart-pounding action, and suspense. The narrator, David Ledoux, was superb, and found myself hanging on his every word!

Where to start when reviewing such an epic novel, without giving any hints or spoilers. This book can be standalone; however, I so look forward to reading the earlier books to find out more about these exciting, yet mysterious characters.

Penn Cage is a former prosecutor and Mayor of Natchez, Mississippi. The Penn Cage series “involves all the quintessentially Southern themes—family, racial violence, ‘miscegenation,’ honor, hypocrisy, and the quest for justice in an unfair society…”

The novel reminds me a little of FORTY ACRES by Dwayne Alexander Smith. Both thrillers, page-turners, different twists with same racial violence involving southern hate crimes, dark secrets, politics, and powerful men seeking revenge.

Iles was involved in a horrific car crash in 2011 which resulted in a ruptured aorta, a medically induced coma and the partial amputation of one leg—can only imagine the long road back—What a comeback, bringing his fans a 5 Star Winner!

As Iles promised back in 2009, the hero is, once again, Penn Cage, the lawyer who first appeared in “The Quiet Game” (1999). A former prosecutor for the Houston district attorney’s office, Penn, along with his daughter, Annie, returned to his childhood home in Natchez, MS, following his wife’s death from cancer.

He came hoping to find peace and a fresh start but instead became embroiled in a series of violent investigations that illuminated the darker side of life in Natchez, past, and present.

Determined to help restore the struggling city, Penn changed professions once again and ran successfully for mayor, the position he holds as this new novel begins. A lot to take in, so you will need to buckle up, keep up with the characters, and virtually everything that follows from beginning to end (as hang on for the ride of your life)!

In 1968 there are murders of two black civil rights activists, Luther Davis and Jimmy Revels, and the brutal gang rape of Revels' sister Viola. These and other atrocities were carried out by the Double Eagles, an ultra-violent splinter group of the Ku Klux Klan that plays an increasingly significant role in this saga.

The narrative begins in 2005, with Viola, who moved to Chicago, after the 1968 assault, is suffering from lung cancer and has returned to Natchez to die. When her death occurs under questionable circumstances, suspicion falls on Tom Cage, Penn’s father and a revered local physician who has served all levels of Natchez society for decades.

The widespread belief that Tom and Viola were once lovers lends substance to the suspicion that he was personally involved in her death. When Tom, racked by private guilt, refuses to defend himself, Penn initiates his own investigation, one that leads directly to the hidden, still hazardous secrets of 40 years before.

Among those who assist Penn in his quest for the truth are two dynamic journalists from different generations. Caitlin Masters, Penn’s fiancée, a Pulitzer Prize winner whose need to pursue a breaking story frequently conflicts with Penn’s more personal agenda.

Henry Sexton is a small-town reporter who has spent the bulk of his career gathering evidence on the unsolved crimes of the civil rights era. Henry is one of Iles’s most vivid, credible characters, and his obsessive search for dangerous truths provides the novel with both its wider historical context and its moral center.

There is so much to this novel, covering topics such as loyalty to one’s family versus loyalty to truth and justice, cost of professional ambition, and sexual relations between the races. More importantly, the pervasive impact of past events and ones refusing to remain buried.

The quest for the truth sends Penn searching for answers back to the turbulent years of the civil rights movement. The plot weaves a story of a conspiracy involving 5 K's, John Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Robert Kennedy, an offshoot of the Ku Klux Klan, called The Double Eagles and lastly, Katrina.

NATCHEZ BURNING itself an embodiment of a famous statement by William Faulkner, a statement that has found its way into Iles’ novel: “The past is never dead; it’s not even past. If it were, there would be no grief or sorrow.”

Our nation’s hidden secrets and sins come front and center with one of the best--- Iles has come back from a near-fatal accident to produce his most searching and ambitious work to date. NATCHEZ BURNING obliterates the artificial distinction between genre and literary fiction with passion, grace and considerable style.

Greg Iles at his BEST – his faithful fans, as well as new readers, will welcome him back with open arms, with this incredible journey into the dark past which proves "Truth is rarely pure and never simple." Oscar Wilde!

JDCMustReadBooks

The Bone Tree
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