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The Turner Trilogy What You Have Left
 
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The Turner Trilogy What You Have Left [Paperback]

James Sallis


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Product Details

  • Paperback: 608 pages
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury US (Jan 13 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0802716873
  • ISBN-13: 978-0802716873
  • Product Dimensions: 21 x 13.9 x 4.3 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 499 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #314,363 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Product Description

A trio of brilliant mysteries "unlike anything else being written today."-Chicago Tribune

Over the past five years, James Sallis has created three of the most acclaimed mysteries published in America, each of them featuring the complex John T urner-former cop, therapist, and ex-con, trying to escape his past, yet ever involved in the small community somewhere near Memphis where he has sought refuge. What You Have Left-concise, elegiac, memorable-collects these three classics in one paperback volume.

About the Author

James Sallis is the author of more than two dozen volumes of fiction, poetry, translation, essays, and criticism, including the Lew Griffin cycle and Drive. His biography of the great crime writer Chester Himes is an acknowledged classic. Sallis lives in Phoenix with his wife, Karyn, and an enormous white cat.


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Amazon.com: 4.0 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)

23 of 24 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars "All my life I'd lived out of step and synch with the larger world, forever tottering on borders and fault lines.", Feb 2 2009
By Mary Whipple - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Turner Trilogy What You Have Left (Paperback)
By combining all three of the Turner novels under one title, author James Sallis creates one of the most unforgettable characters who ever "lived," in this series of stunning, connected novels. However dramatic, skillfully developed, and intelligently written each novel is separately (and one could argue convincingly that each of these is individually a prize-winner deserving of the best of the year award for noir fiction), the idea of reading them all in one package is a no-brainer. Sallis is a writer of the first order, one of the best contemporary novelists in America today. Note that I say "novelists," without adding any limitations, such as "mystery writer," "thriller writer," or "southern gothic writer." He can pack more information into a single sentence than most writers do in a whole paragraph.

Sallis's novels are dark, often noir, versions of what he and his characters see as reality. Cypress Grove, the first in the series, introduces Turner, a man who was a soldier, a Memphis cop turned convict, and a therapist, who has decided to escape from the pressure cooker of big city police work and go to the boonies, far from Memphis. When local Sheriff Lonnie Bates, a continuing character in the series, asks for his help with a murder, Turner reluctantly agrees. In Cripple Creek, the second novel, he is also drawn into the investigation of local crime when a routine traffic stop uncovers a satchel with two hundred thousand dollars in the car of a speeder. "Goombahs" from organized crime in Memphis attack the station house to release the prisoner from jail, and Sheriff Lonnie Bates and his daughter are seriously injured. As acting sheriff, Turner investigates, making some serious enemies.

The concluding novel, Salt River, takes place two years later. Turner, by now, has seen and done it all. Though he has remained in Cripple Creek, his life is dark, sad, and full of the knowledge that unexpected horrors can cripple, if not kill, even the most flickering of one's personal hopes. As he investigates a car theft involving the son of the sheriff, a murder near a utopian commune in the hills, and the possible kidnapping of the sheriff's wife, Turner shows us that life is messy, that people's lives are always unfinished stories, and that all one can do is muddle through, with little expectation that one's efforts will bear fruit. "There are mountain men or cowboys inside us all, Henry David Thoreau and Clint Eastwood riding double in our bloodstreams and our dreams."

Spare with details and minimalist in style, Sallis emphasizes characters in these intelligent and compressed novels of ideas and identity. Every word counts here, even when those words are not adding to the plot. Sallis's lean, mean style reflects both his main character's personality and that style of noir writing in which events are presented and the reader is left to draw conclusions. Through flashbacks and flashforwards, he shows Turner in action, a man genuinely kind and empathetic, at the same time that he is violent and filled with bloodlust. Beautifully crafted, carefully written, and stylistically unforgettable, Sallis's Turner series creates one of the most fascinating characters in contemporary mystery writing. n Mary Whipple

Cypress Grove
Cripple Creek: A Novel
Salt River: A Novel
Drive
Eye of the Cricket
A James Sallis Reader

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars unexplained plot turns drove me nuts, April 21 2012
By crimereader "amyg24" - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
I read some good reviews of another of Sallis's books, so I decided to check out this trilogy. I'm fascinated by the protagonist, but sadly the story-telling fails this great character. The disjointed past/present narrative was a bit confusing at times, but I was willing to write that off as failings of my own short-term memory. However, when the story abruptly ended and all the loose ends tied up in a few lines in ways that were not at all believable, I was disappointed. I persevered and started the second book. When there was a plot twist in that book that came out of nowhere and was so poorly explained, I wanted to throw the book across the room. "I'm the child you didn't know you had and I just happened to rescue you along with this other person who you didn't know was watching you when you walked into this dangerous scenario that you didn't know was so deadly dangerous." That's my paraphrase. And then they go return a rental car. Seriously. The twist took the same amount of words/explication as returning the rental car.

0 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Purchased as a gift, Mar 30 2012
By William L. Riechel - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
As reported back by the person I gave it to they loved the book, but then reviews by people who receive books or any item as a gift can be slanted. I would take advantage of reading some of the book before I purchased it.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 3 reviews  4.0 out of 5 stars 

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