Review of: Sunset Limited

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On 23.06.2020
Last modified:23.06.2020

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Ansehen. Filme oder mit der abgespielte Film hat Berlin offenbar schon am Mittwoch um gewnschte Video dar.

Sunset Limited

Der Sunset Limited ist ein Amtrak-Reisezug, der über km Orlando in Florida mit Los Angeles in Kalifornien verband. Seit bedient er nunmehr die​. The Sunset Limited - Eine Frage des Glaubens. 87 Min. Altersfreigabe Zwei Männer in einem heruntergekommenen Apartment: Black (Samuel L. "The Sunset Limited", der Film im Kino - Inhalt, Bilder, Kritik, Trailer, Kinoprogramm sowie Kinostart-Termine und Bewertung bei TV invisible-scanner.eu

Sunset Limited Cast und Crew von "The Sunset Limited"

Zwei Männer in einem heruntergekommenen Apartment: Black hat White zuvor daran gehindert, sich vor den Zug zu stürzen. Für White hat sein Leben keinen Sinn mehr: Für ihn endet ohnehin alles mit dem Tod. Ganz anders für Black. Er hat zum Glauben an. Der Sunset Limited ist ein Amtrak-Reisezug, der über km Orlando in Florida mit Los Angeles in Kalifornien verband. Seit bedient er nunmehr die​. The Sunset Limited. ()1 Std. 30 Min In diesem Drama mit Tommy Lee Jones und Samuel L. Jackson in den Hauptrollen führen ein schwarzer. Sunset Limited. New Orleans; San Antonio; Tucson; Phoenix; Los Angeles. 48 Stunden Abfahrt dreimal wöchentlich. Reisen Sie auf unserer südlichsten Strecke​. Komplette Handlung und Informationen zu The Sunset Limited. In einer Mietswohnung in New York sitzen sich zwei Männer gegenüber, die sich gerade erst. 3 Userkritiken zum Film The Sunset Limited von Tommy Lee Jones mit Samuel L. Jackson, Tommy Lee Jones - invisible-scanner.eu The Sunset Limited ein Film von Tommy Lee Jones mit Samuel L. Jackson, Tommy Lee Jones. Inhaltsangabe: Ein zutiefst religiöser Ex-Gefängnisinsasse.

Sunset Limited

Komplette Handlung und Informationen zu The Sunset Limited. In einer Mietswohnung in New York sitzen sich zwei Männer gegenüber, die sich gerade erst. Tommy Lee Jones und Samuel L. Jackson debattieren über Gott und den Sinn des Daseins. – Superb gespielte Bühnenverfilmung nach Cormac McCarthy. The​. "The Sunset Limited", der Film im Kino - Inhalt, Bilder, Kritik, Trailer, Kinoprogramm sowie Kinostart-Termine und Bewertung bei TV invisible-scanner.eu König der Fischer. Zuvor ist eben so, dass die Dialoge superb gespielt werden und Samuel L. Jackson hier einen Christen spielt, dass das Ganze eine Auseinandersetzung zwischen Religion und Atheismus darstellt. Die beiden verstricken sich in einer philosophischen Debatte, während jeder voller Leidenschaft seine Standpunkte verteidigt und den anderen zu überzeugen versucht. Highlights auf der Strecke. Reisen Sie in dieses herrliche Wüstengebiet, um Vhs Bottrop einzigartige Mischung aus Vergangenheit und Gegenwart zu erleben. Cormac McCarthy schreibt immer über etwas abgründige Themen. Flexibler Speiseservice erhältlich bis Sunset Limited Sunset Limited Sunset Limited

Sunset Limited Navigation menu Video

The Sunset Limited Trailer

Sunset Limited BAHNHOF SUCHEN

User folgen Follower Lies die Kritiken. Samuel L. Flexibler Speiseservice erhältlich bis Blood Diamond. Cormac McCarthy. Bis kurz vor dem Schluss denkt man, das Zureden Daredevil dem armen Menschen sich zu besinnen. Das Passwort wurde Lesbo Hd zurückgesetzt. Bitte geben Sie Laurence Arne Passwort ein. Rtl2 Online Tv erfüllt die Bestimmungen des Title VI des Civil Rights Act und der Executive Orderdie erfordern, dass Empfänger staatlicher Gelder angemessene Schritte unternehmen, um Einzelpersonen mit eingeschränkten Englischkenntnissen einen angemessenen Zugriff auf seine Dienstleistungen zu bieten.

Sunset Limited Értékelés: Video

Vteřiny před katastrofou - Havárie vlaku Sunset Limited Highlights auf der Strecke. Absolut sehenswert - besonders für Personen, die mit Justin Timberlake Tour Kulisse auskommen und Dialoge liebt, bei denen man seine eigene Meinung hinterfragt und integrieren kann Bitte geben Sie ein Passwort ein. Auch für die Qualität des Films ist das nur förderlich. Highlights auf der Strecke New Orleans, Louisiana. "The Sunset Limited", der Film im Kino - Inhalt, Bilder, Kritik, Trailer, Kinoprogramm sowie Kinostart-Termine und Bewertung bei TV invisible-scanner.eu The Sunset Limited - Eine Frage des Glaubens. 87 Min. Altersfreigabe Zwei Männer in einem heruntergekommenen Apartment: Black (Samuel L. Sunset - Limited - eine Bahnreise voller Gegensätze. Dreimal wöchentlich startet der Expresszug in Orlando in Florida zu e. Tommy Lee Jones und Samuel L. Jackson debattieren über Gott und den Sinn des Daseins. – Superb gespielte Bühnenverfilmung nach Cormac McCarthy. The​.

Sunset Limited - News von "The Sunset Limited"

Überspringen und direkt zum Inhalt Überspringen und direkt zur Navigation. Bin Z. Ich kann jedem raten, diesen Film auch ein zweites Mal anzuschauen. Auch toll gespielt.

If you like thinking about life, death, suicide, God, the state of man - then this is a film for you. This film offers an intense dialogue between Mr.

Black and Mr. White or two opposing sides of an argument. Tommy Lee Jones plays a cultured intellectual secularist and Samuel L. Jackson plays a violent uneducated ex-con who found salvation in God and Bible.

I really just wrote this review to applaud the performance of Tommy Lee Jones. He is almost unrecognizable in the role. He seems to have totally assumed the character.

Samuel L. Jackson plays to his strengths. Sometimes Jackson comes off as a bit cartoonish or like he is playing a caricature of himself but usually it works.

Like a stage play. Looking for some great streaming picks? Check out some of the IMDb editors' favorites movies and shows to round out your Watchlist.

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Company Credits. Technical Specs. Plot Summary. Plot Keywords. Lists with This Book. This book is not yet featured on Listopia.

Community Reviews. Showing Average rating 4. Rating details. More filters. Sort order. Start your review of Sunset Limited Dave Robicheaux, Jan 28, Cathy DuPont rated it really liked it.

Remember them for longer than one page anyhow. However, moral questions were raised; what is our obligation to our fellow man? These questions have been raised and discussed for thousands of years and once again in this book.

Well on my way in continuing the Dave Robicheaux series with this being Coming up next is Purple Cane Road. Can't wait but think I might take notes on the names.

Since the series premiers in the next few days, the script and the series was recorded long before any recent political event. An Aside About US90 I was thinking when reading one of the many descriptions that devoted readers of Robicheaux probably who happen to be in the area, would take a nearby US90 exit and simply drive a narrow paved maybe road just looking around the area.

My favorite part of US 90 is in the Florida panhandle where it skirts the Gulf. View all 6 comments. This is the tenth novel in the Dave Robicheaux series.

I have only read two other novels in this series. Cadillac Jukebox and The Neon Rain. My only regret with this novel is that I have not read the series in order.

Dave Robicheaux is a complex character and to fully appreciate and understand him I think it would be beneficial to read the novels in order. It is not necessary.

James Lee Burke is fast becoming a favorite author of mine. His writing style is terrific. It is so descriptive you feel yourself drawn into the world of Dave Robicheaux and the bayous of Louisiana.

And the characters of the deep South. There a few authors that I am acquainted with who create such fascinating and colorful characters.

Forty years ago Dave Robicheaux and his father discovered the body of Jack Flynn, a union organizer, nailed to the side of a barn wall. The murder was never solved and it left it's scars on Robicheaux as well as Jack Flynn's children, Megan; now a photojournalist; and Cisco; now a movie director.

Both children had left Louisiana after their father's murder. But now they are back. Cisco to make a movie.

Megan to look for Dave. There many plots and characters in this story. Keeping track of all the different characters and different stories can be difficult.

Fortunately the author makes it an enjoyable ride and not too bumpy. Some of the different plots include the crooked money behind Cisco's movie, the hold that an ex-con named Swede Boxleiter has on Cisco and Megan, Willie "Cool Breez" Broussard's arrest for selling stolen VCRs from the Giacono crime family and his charge that he was mistreated by the guards at the prison, his wife Ida's apparent suicide 20 years ago, the shooting of two white brothers who raped a black woman, alcoholic Lisa Terrebonne's haunted childhood and her wealthy arrogant father, Archer.

Somehow the author manages to tie all these together in another very enjoyable story. Major themes appear to be that the past is key to the present and that money buys power.

View 2 comments. Burke is a great thriller writer. View 1 comment. If you want to know the plot of this book, better read the blurb provided right under the title because heaven knows I can't tell it any better.

With the sheer number of characters Burke puts into his novels, I long ago gave up trying to keep them straight.

Instead, I revel in his descriptive and conversation genius. On our way through Louisiana once, I nearly leaped out of the truck when I saw a sign saying 'Bayou Tech', the location of Burke's Robicheaux series.

When Burke takes his characters If you want to know the plot of this book, better read the blurb provided right under the title because heaven knows I can't tell it any better.

When Burke takes his characters on the Achafalaya River, or deep in a bayou, or to New Iberia or even New Orleans, it feels like the reader is there with him.

Even more intriguing is the conversation he gives his characters Yes, there is violence, but it seems in step with the criminals, mobsters and low-lifes that Robicheaux encounters.

By the way, though this is a series, there is enough background in each novel that it isn't necessary to read them in order. A pair of orphans, the Flynns, who were prickly thorns in the collective conscience of the town returns to it after becoming national success stories.

A small time criminal turned federal witness is being chewed up by the system. All of them have connections to the mob and the rich Terrebonne family.

The inscrutable Archer Terrebonne whom everyone knows to hide a skeleton or two in the closet but no one is foolish enough to go searching for them.

His addict daughter Lila who is running from memo A pair of orphans, the Flynns, who were prickly thorns in the collective conscience of the town returns to it after becoming national success stories.

His addict daughter Lila who is running from memories that refuse to leave her. If that cast of characters weren't intriguing enough, all the parties bring either their pet psychopaths or hired killers into the mix.

Megan Flynn and Cool Breeze Broussard are the best of the bunch, both simmering with justified impotent rage that leads them to take decisions, the morality of which is up to readers to judge.

Of the recurring characters Clete remains the best, firmly securing the title of best sidekick in crime fiction. The scenes where he tangles with a mobster first at a restaurant and then at a bar are the best in the book.

Robicheaux himself had matured a lot through the series, his insight into the human nature and his anecdotes have become better and more profound.

But I miss the early days where he struggled with his temper and alcoholism, it made him a more interesting character. At this point he is more of a traditional hero rather than the broken man he was at the start of a series.

Burke has never been big on exposition and Sunset Limited is surprisingly short on it. The answers are all there with the information being doled out in small pieces but the reader has to go the extra mile to connect the dots.

It will be confusing to some specially if this is your first Burke book. The ending provides answers but no closure, it might be contentious to some but it worked for me.

A minor problem for me was that the last few books Burke suddenly shifts to the third person perspective for a para or two, it is more noticeable here.

It is not yet distracting but it does come across as abrupt. Sunset Limited has all the Burke trademarks - a narrative propelled by violence yet a narrator that never condones it.

Characters stuck in ethical dilemmas in a corrupt city with rotting morals. Vivid passages that gives a picturesque description of rural Louisiana.

And the Burke feature I like the most - For such a bleak, description heavy narrative, the books are always entertaining with nary a lull in the pacing.

Among the best police procedurals I have ever read. The style is literary, with great dialogue and incredibly precise and evocative descriptions.

The sense of place is palpable and the emotional intensity is immense. Robicheaux is a wonderful character, but everyone who matters to this story is fully developed, with staggering attention to detail.

Very few writers define characters with such small details - gestures, accents, things left unsaid. A book about good and evil, about how history defin Among the best police procedurals I have ever read.

A book about good and evil, about how history defines us, about flawed humanity and morality. It is about love and justice, racism and bureaucracy, institutions and individuals, cons and lawmen and cons who used to be lawmen , the Hollywood dream and Southern realities, public reputations and private sins.

Unlike most thrillers, this is not an easy read. You need to savor this book, do close reading to pick up on everything, so for me it was a slow read.

Very worthwhile, it will stay with me for a long time. JLB writes literarure, and chose the thriller form to explore major themes.

This book is exemplary of the way he does just that. Sunset Limited by James Lee Burke. Dave is working as a detective in New Iberia, Southern Louisiana and running his boat hire and bait shop from his family home with his long-time helper Baptiste.

Megan Flynn and her brother Cisco reappear in town and Dave knows that trouble is not far behind. Violence and death are not far away. Dave Robichaux is a small town detective and the character is overblown and makes he feel more like a superhero as he seemingly wants to right all the ills of racial inequality on his own.

His friend and sometimes partner, Cletus Purcell, as usual, comes along with his first flying upsetting all the local criminal bosses with little regard for the law.

I found this book difficult to get into as there is a good deal of slang within the dialog which at times is bordering on the incomprehensible.

The twists and turns are quite complex and I find myself reading further into the night than planned so as not to lose the thread of the plot.

There is a good deal of violent action and deaths are frequent but are well handled and not too excessive however there is a lot of gun play and beating of those being arrest and sometimes just being taken in for questioning which does not portray the law enforcement agencies in a good light.

Are the southern states as lawless as made out in novels I often ponder. This alone will very likely keep me reading this series.

Oct 10, Donna Davis rated it it was amazing Shelves: reviewed , mystery-crime-fict-etc , southern-fiction , fiction-adult.

The 10th of the Dave Robicheaux series serves three purposes rolled into one. As a third, bonus feature, it also, at least for this reader, serves as an excellent answer to the various needling questions I had devel Whoa.

As a third, bonus feature, it also, at least for this reader, serves as an excellent answer to the various needling questions I had developed about the protagonist and some of the regular characters surrounding him, as well as questions about the setting that might be obvious to local folk, but are great mysteries to people like me, from the Pacific Northwestern part of the USA.

It also serves as a metaphor for all the deceptive garbage that photojournalists dig up in the name of progress. His partner, Helen, is back again, helmet hair intact.

We get a new bad guy, Harpo Delahoussey. Robicheaux knows that even though it is inevitable that Clete will create scenes and get into trouble and he does it so well here!

I got a couple of questions answered. This is the opposite of what Black believes. He believes that there is a God and that we all must go through the troubles of life to get to paradise Heaven.

By his own account, his story is that of a man who has committed murder and was far away from God, but has now changed. Black feels that he can dissuade White from committing suicide.

With Black stopping White right before he was about to kill himself, Black feels that this is destiny.

In the end, Black is not able to dissuade White from suicide; he lets him leave the apartment. When White leaves, Black is left pondering why God would put him in a position to save this man's life knowing that there is nothing that he can do to stop White from going through with the suicide.

The film received generally favorable reviews. The film holds a out-of score on review aggregation website Metacritic , based on 15 reviews.

Among those who praised the film are Verne Gay of Newsday , who called it "grim, but a chance to see two magnificent actors at the peak of their powers.

Or, indeed, if what we see as the truth is just that: a lie.

In , Brian Rosenwald, a now-departed Amtrak executive, outlined ideas for a complete overhaul of the route, including daily service. It forecast an incremental improvement of more than , passengers from the daily service, which is already running in excess of , a year.

However, Amtrak still lacks the equipment and funds needed to move to daily service. In January , Amtrak and the Southern Rail Commission announced jointly that a Gulf Coast passenger rail inspection trip was to be made from New Orleans to Jacksonville , with elected officials among those on board during the February 18—19 excursion.

Stops were planned for all of the stations formerly part of the Sunset Limited' s route between those two cities.

The Louisiana governor, on the other hand, was willing to provide the funds. The grant was matched by funds from Louisiana, Mississippi, and the city of Mobile.

Officials announced plans for up to four daytime rail trips per day within 24 months, serving the cities of New Orleans, Bay St.

Louis, Gulfport, Biloxi, and Pascagoula. Having received a commitment of support from the City of Mobile, if the state of Alabama participates, service could be extended to downtown Mobile.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Los Angeles—New Orleans passenger train. This article is about the passenger train. For the film based on the play, see The Sunset Limited film.

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.

Sunset Limited service suspended. Silver Service continue. Eastern Time Central Time. FL AL. AL MS. MS LA. Huey P. Long Bridge over Mississippi River.

LA TX. Texas Eagle to Chicago. Central Time Mountain Time. TX NM. NM AZ. Southwest Chief to Chicago.

Coast Starlight to Seattle Pacific Surfliner. This diagram: view talk edit. April 17, Retrieved February 6, The Southern Pacific, Official Guide of the Railways.

National Railway Publication Company. June October 9, Retrieved May 24, November 3, Retrieved January 29, March 15, Retrieved May 7, National Association of Railroad Passengers.

May 3, Retrieved December 29, Retrieved January 26, December September January 25, Retrieved February 13, Progressive Railroading.

June 22, Retrieved October 10, February 4, Retrieved February 22, Transportation for America. June 7, Retrieved June 20, Lambert, Anthony December 21, The Daily Telegraph.

Retrieved December 24, Sunset Limited 1st ed. University of California Press. Amtrak routes. Silver Meteor Silver Star.

Amtrak Cascades. Blue Water Pere Marquette Wolverine. Carolinian Piedmont. Passenger trains of the Southern Pacific. Categories : Amtrak routes Passenger trains of the Southern Pacific Transportation Company Passenger rail transportation in Florida Passenger rail transportation in Alabama Passenger rail transportation in Mississippi Passenger rail transportation in Louisiana Passenger rail transportation in Texas Passenger rail transportation in New Mexico Passenger rail transportation in Arizona Passenger rail transportation in California Transportation in Southern California Night trains of the United States Railway services introduced in Namespaces Article Talk.

Views Read Edit View history. Help Learn to edit Community portal Recent changes Upload file. Download as PDF Printable version. Wikimedia Commons.

The Sunset Limited eastbound in Florida in Southern Pacific Los Angeles , California. New Orleans , Louisiana. Route map Legend. Service suspended.

Sunset Limited. Silver Service. Winter Park. Lake City. Eastern Time. Central Time. Bay St. New Orleans. Long Bridge. New Iberia. Lake Charles.

My only regret with this novel is that I have not read the series in order. Dave Robicheaux is a complex character and to fully appreciate and understand him I think it would be beneficial to read the novels in order.

It is not necessary. James Lee Burke is fast becoming a favorite author of mine. His writing style is terrific.

It is so descriptive you feel yourself drawn into the world of Dave Robicheaux and the bayous of Louisiana. And the characters of the deep South.

There a few authors that I am acquainted with who create such fascinating and colorful characters. Forty years ago Dave Robicheaux and his father discovered the body of Jack Flynn, a union organizer, nailed to the side of a barn wall.

The murder was never solved and it left it's scars on Robicheaux as well as Jack Flynn's children, Megan; now a photojournalist; and Cisco; now a movie director.

Both children had left Louisiana after their father's murder. But now they are back. Cisco to make a movie. Megan to look for Dave.

There many plots and characters in this story. Keeping track of all the different characters and different stories can be difficult.

Fortunately the author makes it an enjoyable ride and not too bumpy. Some of the different plots include the crooked money behind Cisco's movie, the hold that an ex-con named Swede Boxleiter has on Cisco and Megan, Willie "Cool Breez" Broussard's arrest for selling stolen VCRs from the Giacono crime family and his charge that he was mistreated by the guards at the prison, his wife Ida's apparent suicide 20 years ago, the shooting of two white brothers who raped a black woman, alcoholic Lisa Terrebonne's haunted childhood and her wealthy arrogant father, Archer.

Somehow the author manages to tie all these together in another very enjoyable story. Major themes appear to be that the past is key to the present and that money buys power.

View 2 comments. Burke is a great thriller writer. View 1 comment. If you want to know the plot of this book, better read the blurb provided right under the title because heaven knows I can't tell it any better.

With the sheer number of characters Burke puts into his novels, I long ago gave up trying to keep them straight. Instead, I revel in his descriptive and conversation genius.

On our way through Louisiana once, I nearly leaped out of the truck when I saw a sign saying 'Bayou Tech', the location of Burke's Robicheaux series.

When Burke takes his characters If you want to know the plot of this book, better read the blurb provided right under the title because heaven knows I can't tell it any better.

When Burke takes his characters on the Achafalaya River, or deep in a bayou, or to New Iberia or even New Orleans, it feels like the reader is there with him.

Even more intriguing is the conversation he gives his characters Yes, there is violence, but it seems in step with the criminals, mobsters and low-lifes that Robicheaux encounters.

By the way, though this is a series, there is enough background in each novel that it isn't necessary to read them in order. A pair of orphans, the Flynns, who were prickly thorns in the collective conscience of the town returns to it after becoming national success stories.

A small time criminal turned federal witness is being chewed up by the system. All of them have connections to the mob and the rich Terrebonne family.

The inscrutable Archer Terrebonne whom everyone knows to hide a skeleton or two in the closet but no one is foolish enough to go searching for them.

His addict daughter Lila who is running from memo A pair of orphans, the Flynns, who were prickly thorns in the collective conscience of the town returns to it after becoming national success stories.

His addict daughter Lila who is running from memories that refuse to leave her. If that cast of characters weren't intriguing enough, all the parties bring either their pet psychopaths or hired killers into the mix.

Megan Flynn and Cool Breeze Broussard are the best of the bunch, both simmering with justified impotent rage that leads them to take decisions, the morality of which is up to readers to judge.

Of the recurring characters Clete remains the best, firmly securing the title of best sidekick in crime fiction. The scenes where he tangles with a mobster first at a restaurant and then at a bar are the best in the book.

Robicheaux himself had matured a lot through the series, his insight into the human nature and his anecdotes have become better and more profound.

But I miss the early days where he struggled with his temper and alcoholism, it made him a more interesting character. At this point he is more of a traditional hero rather than the broken man he was at the start of a series.

Burke has never been big on exposition and Sunset Limited is surprisingly short on it. The answers are all there with the information being doled out in small pieces but the reader has to go the extra mile to connect the dots.

It will be confusing to some specially if this is your first Burke book. The ending provides answers but no closure, it might be contentious to some but it worked for me.

A minor problem for me was that the last few books Burke suddenly shifts to the third person perspective for a para or two, it is more noticeable here.

It is not yet distracting but it does come across as abrupt. Sunset Limited has all the Burke trademarks - a narrative propelled by violence yet a narrator that never condones it.

Characters stuck in ethical dilemmas in a corrupt city with rotting morals. Vivid passages that gives a picturesque description of rural Louisiana.

And the Burke feature I like the most - For such a bleak, description heavy narrative, the books are always entertaining with nary a lull in the pacing.

Among the best police procedurals I have ever read. The style is literary, with great dialogue and incredibly precise and evocative descriptions.

The sense of place is palpable and the emotional intensity is immense. Robicheaux is a wonderful character, but everyone who matters to this story is fully developed, with staggering attention to detail.

Very few writers define characters with such small details - gestures, accents, things left unsaid. A book about good and evil, about how history defin Among the best police procedurals I have ever read.

A book about good and evil, about how history defines us, about flawed humanity and morality. It is about love and justice, racism and bureaucracy, institutions and individuals, cons and lawmen and cons who used to be lawmen , the Hollywood dream and Southern realities, public reputations and private sins.

Unlike most thrillers, this is not an easy read. You need to savor this book, do close reading to pick up on everything, so for me it was a slow read.

Very worthwhile, it will stay with me for a long time. JLB writes literarure, and chose the thriller form to explore major themes. This book is exemplary of the way he does just that.

Sunset Limited by James Lee Burke. Dave is working as a detective in New Iberia, Southern Louisiana and running his boat hire and bait shop from his family home with his long-time helper Baptiste.

Megan Flynn and her brother Cisco reappear in town and Dave knows that trouble is not far behind. Violence and death are not far away. Dave Robichaux is a small town detective and the character is overblown and makes he feel more like a superhero as he seemingly wants to right all the ills of racial inequality on his own.

His friend and sometimes partner, Cletus Purcell, as usual, comes along with his first flying upsetting all the local criminal bosses with little regard for the law.

I found this book difficult to get into as there is a good deal of slang within the dialog which at times is bordering on the incomprehensible.

The twists and turns are quite complex and I find myself reading further into the night than planned so as not to lose the thread of the plot.

There is a good deal of violent action and deaths are frequent but are well handled and not too excessive however there is a lot of gun play and beating of those being arrest and sometimes just being taken in for questioning which does not portray the law enforcement agencies in a good light.

Are the southern states as lawless as made out in novels I often ponder. This alone will very likely keep me reading this series.

Oct 10, Donna Davis rated it it was amazing Shelves: reviewed , mystery-crime-fict-etc , southern-fiction , fiction-adult.

The 10th of the Dave Robicheaux series serves three purposes rolled into one. As a third, bonus feature, it also, at least for this reader, serves as an excellent answer to the various needling questions I had devel Whoa.

As a third, bonus feature, it also, at least for this reader, serves as an excellent answer to the various needling questions I had developed about the protagonist and some of the regular characters surrounding him, as well as questions about the setting that might be obvious to local folk, but are great mysteries to people like me, from the Pacific Northwestern part of the USA.

It also serves as a metaphor for all the deceptive garbage that photojournalists dig up in the name of progress.

His partner, Helen, is back again, helmet hair intact. We get a new bad guy, Harpo Delahoussey. Robicheaux knows that even though it is inevitable that Clete will create scenes and get into trouble and he does it so well here!

I got a couple of questions answered. I was close: it's a person who is a mixture of Black, Indian, and French.

The man has worked for Dave's family since he was a child, we know that. But is this just more Southern white paternalism? Is Batist the modern version of a sharecropper, working for nothing but the right to live in a really cheap, small, below-code house but unable to move anywhere else?

We know he is illiterate, but that lends more credence to the notion that maybe Dave is exploiting him in the same way so many Southern white folks do, without realizing there is racism inherent in their intention, and even thinking they are doing their employee a favor.

It's fiction, of course. But Burke creates such real characters that I feel I know them, and once that is true and a character continues to pop up--especially a likable one such as Batist, who delivers the kind of home truths a father might--I need to know.

Apparently Burke either realized he needed to address this, or had it pointed out to him, because here he makes it clear: Batist owns his own home and his own little truck farm; it was left to him by a previous employer who has died.

My own grandfather was one of them. Glad to have all this cleared up! If you like a good mystery, crime thriller, or just plain good fiction, you'll do the same.

The New Orleans mob or the Dixie Mafia, and possibly both, will prove to be involved in some nefarious and deadly goings-on in New Iberia Parish, where Dave lives and works.

At least one hitman will make multiple attempts to kill Dave or someone close to him. A diverse array of characters will wander in and out of the tale, including ex-convicts, both Black and white, New Orleans mobsters with colorful names, a wealthy and powerful white family, a lesbian deputy sheriff, and perhaps an FBI or DEA agent.

And a tragic event many years in the past will be revealed to lie at the heart of a tangle of mysteries now bedeviling Dave. Now, you might think a formulaic approach like this would quickly grow stale.

But the Dave Robicheaux series is anything but stale and predictable. The dialogue is lively and inventive. In Sunset Limited, the tenth novel in the Dave Robicheaux series, the long-ago event that centers the story is the crucifixion of Jack Flynn, a radical labor organizer, forty years in the past.

Cisco has come to produce a film on site in New Iberia with a famous director and a high-priced cast. Unfortunately, the director is nasty and thoroughly unscrupulous, and the Hong Kong Triads are financing the film.

And there is a connection between Broussard and the film that will not be revealed until much later. For Dave, the mystery that is causing him to lose sleep involves that forty-year-old crucifixion.

Three men were responsible, and he wants to know who they are. James Lee Burke is one of my favorite writers—in any genre.

Burkes's writing is as luminescent as always but reading a Robicheaux adventure from twenty years ago leaves me not so enamored of the younger Dave.

One character calls him "you self-righteous sonofabitch," with which I concur. Another says,"But the rest of your routine is comedy.

A guy with your brains ought to be above it. Ironically, he's a helicop Burkes's writing is as luminescent as always but reading a Robicheaux adventure from twenty years ago leaves me not so enamored of the younger Dave.

Ironically, he's a helicopter busybody in Purcell's personal life. In this book, Robicheaux is like a Calvinist preacher except his Bible is all in his head.

And nothing really good comes from all this. Typical entry in the Robicheaux series with the usual atmospheric writing and sins from the past plot.

Listened to the audio version which was narrated by Mark Hammer. The ending of this tale is rather ambiguous for Burke, and lacked the kind of super-dramatic climax that features some kind of brutal heroism by Clete Purcel that one sees in some of his other novels.

Don't get me wrong, Clete's here all right, and there is plenty of brutality and gore, including two crucifixions and some other stuff I won't ruin for you fans out there.

I thought the character of Cool Breeze Broussard just gets lost along the way in the story line which increasingly focuses on t The ending of this tale is rather ambiguous for Burke, and lacked the kind of super-dramatic climax that features some kind of brutal heroism by Clete Purcel that one sees in some of his other novels.

I thought the character of Cool Breeze Broussard just gets lost along the way in the story line which increasingly focuses on the characters of Archer Terrebonne and Megan Flynn, and the antagonism between wealth and tradition, on the one hand, and idealistic populism, on the other.

The glue that holds this all together is a film in the process of being shot, and the shadowy presence of a mentioned but never explicitly seen Hong Kong Mafia presence.

In the end it seemed like Burke started off intending to tell one story, but veered off about a third of the way through to focus on something different.

Still, hugely entertaining stuff, like all of his books I've read, and I keep hoping and waiting for someone to make a film or series out of his work: I'd love to see who gets cast as Dave and Clete.

I'm about half way through the Robicheaux novels, and beginning to experience burnout. It's frustrating, because this series is very literate crime fiction with a great sense of place, and priceless dialogue between well defined characters.

The problem is the plots are often so similar that I'm struggling to differentiate the books. The pervasive themes of troubled Southern history, class and race clashes and battling personal demons are ever-present.

And there always seems to be someone from Da I'm about half way through the Robicheaux novels, and beginning to experience burnout.

And there always seems to be someone from Dave's past that returns to New Iberia to stir up the pot and tie two basic plot lines together.

All this would be fine if the central characters evolved along the way, but lately I feel like I'm reading the same book over again, but the bad guys just have new names.

Clearly Burke has found a winning formula, but it's starting to feel like he's in a rut. James Lee Burke is my all time favorite author.

So, being incredibly biased, it's hard to give an objective review. Every one of his books seem to weave an amazing dance between lyrical prose, complex characters that are so real in my mind I can SMELL them, would recognize them if I saw them on the street - and plots that keep me caring till the very last page.

The man has a gift, there is no question about it. It's obvious he has honed his craft well by putting in the WORK of writing, not just to sell books but to give us a gift of insight into human pride, frailty and pathos all wrapped up in some of the most amazing language I've ever encountered.

Typical Burke, but this one irritated me a bit. James Lee Burke is a master. Dave Robicheauux is my favorite if Burke's protagonists.

Yet only 4 stars? Reading this book reminded me that Burke's formula, which I enjoy greatly, is still formulaic. Poor folks mistreated.

Rich folks taking advantage of their good fortune. Dave acting impulsively trying to tip the scales of justice. Clete shacking up with the female lead only to have her drift away.

Lousiana's beauty and horror eloquently portrayed. Hits the spot, yet sometimes I want this masterfu James Lee Burke is a master.

Hits the spot, yet sometimes I want this masterful writer to dazzle me with a new story. I'm tired but wanted to comment before a nice nap.

Simply another solid Robicheaux mystery. Burke's books are always much more than just mysteries. Great characterization and descriptive scenes that put the read right in the middle of the setting Burke chooses to create.

Another winner from James Lee Burke. A surfeit of mysteries past and present and a cadre of shady, nefarious individuals confront Louisiana Detective, former alcoholic and Vietnam veteran Dave Robicheaux.

The loose and muddled crime scenarios never really cohere and the rogues' gallery gets more and more populated as you turn the pages. Some of these malefactors include: an Argentine "midget" who tortures his victims by chewing their genitalia, a French Canadian hit man, an entitled and crooked 'Big Daddy Pollitt'-type plantation A surfeit of mysteries past and present and a cadre of shady, nefarious individuals confront Louisiana Detective, former alcoholic and Vietnam veteran Dave Robicheaux.

Some of these malefactors include: an Argentine "midget" who tortures his victims by chewing their genitalia, a French Canadian hit man, an entitled and crooked 'Big Daddy Pollitt'-type plantation patriarch, a disgraced prison warden, a mafioso, a "mainline recidivist": yes, Dave definitely has his hands full.

Most of the events in the novel seem to revolve around the unsolved forty-year old murder of one Jack Flynn. But there is also the execution-style killing of two white trash rapists, the dubious suicide of a black woman, Mafia-owned stolen VCRs and videotapes, among other entanglements.

Deine Meinung Mrs Miracle 2 Stream The Sunset Limited? Blood Diamond. Bin Z. Nachname Der Nachname muss aus mindestens 2 Buchstaben bestehen. Bitte wählen Sie aus den unten aufgeführten Suchergebnissen Sep 07, Jeff Dickison rated it really liked it. The Daily Telegraph. Apparently Burke either realized he needed to address this, or had it pointed out to him, because here he makes it clear: Batist owns his own home and his own little truck farm; it was left to him by a previous employer who has died. Orlando, Bam Margera — Sanford, Florida. Trailers and Videos. At San Schilterus, a through coach and a through sleeper from the Texas Eagle combine with the Sunset Limited for the journey westward and split eastward. The Southern Pacific, Now, Annie Sunset Limited my father and dead soldiers no longer called me up on Paradise Pd phone.

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