A lot of rhetorical question in the book "Back from the Dead by Peter Leonard "

News cover A lot of rhetorical question in the book  "Back from the Dead by Peter Leonard "
15 Jan 2013 13:27:23 What would you do if your dad was Elmore Leonard? Write imagist poetry, political intrigues, short stories about country curates or stifled suburban wives and their minimalist marriages? The one thing I'll bet you wouldn't do is set yourself up as a purveyor of lowlife, urban thrillers. Pa's always going to have the drop on you. But here comes Back from the Dead, Peter Leonard's fifth thriller – and just as lowlife and urban as its predecessors. Just as teeth-clenchingly, chest-clutchingly, unremittingly exciting, too. Don't pick the book up if you have any intention of putting it down before you've got to the end. And don't let the fact that Back from the Dead is the sequel to last year's Voices of the Dead put you off starting your Leonard Jr studies here. Though Back… resolves both the core story and many sub-plots of Voices…, it contrives, too, to be satisfyingly nutritious in and of itself. That's because Leonard's heroes and villains exist almost solely in terms of dialogue and action. To know them is to see what they say and do under pressure – which is most of the time. Take Harry Levin: until what Leonard's characters would call a couple months ago he was a scrap metal dealer settling into a nicely numbed-out middle age in early-70s Detroit. Then his daughter was killed by a car driven by a drunken German diplomat who turned out to be Ernst Hess, a one-time Nazi looter and killer and the man who sent Harry's parents to their death at Dachau. Don't let that Hardyesque coincidence trouble you, by the way. There are more to come but you whizz through them without a thought thanks to the punch and pulse of Leonard's prose. Hemingway once said that all American literature comes out of Huckleberry Finn, and there's certainly no getting away from Twain's loose-limbed twang in these pages. "Cordell had met the Colombians through a black dude name High-Step"; "Satisfaction guaranteed or you money back"; "It was early evening, sky overcast, getting dark as Harry passed the mall and the treeless subdivisions of Troy, the lots big and open now, farms here and there". Schoolteachers would have fits at such tense-skipping, conjunction-omitting, subject-dropping, shapeless-seeming sentences. But Leonard Sr would approve. And I think you will too.
 

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