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Peter Farris

Auteur de Dernier appel pour les vivants

7+ oeuvres 84 utilisateurs 6 critiques

Œuvres de Peter Farris

Dernier appel pour les vivants (2012) 47 exemplaires
Devil Himself: A Novel (2022) 19 exemplaires
Le diable en personne (2017) 9 exemplaires
Les mangeurs d'argile (2019) 6 exemplaires
Le présage (2023) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

More Stories from the Twilight Zone (2010) — Contributeur — 45 exemplaires

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Membres

Critiques

Story of a reclusive man with lots of secrets who takes in a runaway girl who has been abused, prostituted, and almost murdered by a far-reaching criminal organization starts out well, but loses a bit of steam and plausibility as it proceeds. The audiobook would also benefit from a narrator who knows how to pronounce "kudzu" the proper Southern way. A few great scenes make up for the haphazard narrative, which never quite succeeds in letting us get to know some of the key players, although the two main characters are well-portrayed.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
datrappert | Feb 22, 2023 |
A parolee and member of the Aryan Brotherhood (AB), robs a bank solo without waiting for his two partners, grabs a bank teller as a hostage and holes up in the mountains with his meth addict girlfriend. Violent and dark, the police and the AB brothers work to bring him to justice of one type or the other. There is some weirdness around the bank robber, the loner bank teller, who is the highlight of the book, and his mother. If you like Blood Meredian or No Country for Old Men, you will like this; if not, read something else.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
skipstern | 4 autres critiques | Jul 11, 2021 |
in the same vain as The Donnybrook and The Devil All the Time, paunch you in the face story of violent men coming to violent ends. a great debut!
 
Signalé
zmagic69 | 4 autres critiques | May 7, 2013 |
Fresh out of prison after a long stretch, what’s the first thing up on ex-con Hobe Hicklin’s ‘To Do’ list? Rob his hometown North Georgia Savings and Loan, of course. In and out in under 3 minutes with the cash, as robberies go this one goes pretty smoothly.

Well, except for killing the bank manager. Probably shouldn’t have taken the teller hostage either. Oh, and considering the job was planned with his fellow Aryan Brotherhood members while he was inside, Hicklin probably should have waited for them instead of jumping the score.

Now not only does Hicklin have local Sheriff Tommy Lang and the Georgia Bureau of Investigation on his ass, he has some very seriously pissed off Brotherhood members gunning for him as well. On top of which, Hicklin’s got to juggle his tweaking junkie girlfriend, Hummingbird, and that skittish mama’s boy of a teller, Charlie Colquitt.

Come to think of it, maybe that score didn’t go so smoothly after all. And it’s a good thing for readers it didn’t, because author Peter Farris’s debut Last Call for the Living is an intensely engaging exploration of the aftermath of a robbery which initially seems to have gone right, only to be revealed as having gone gloriously wrong in virtually every way possible.

On the surface things unfold as a classic fugitive in hiding tale, with the twist of Hicklin being wanted by not just the law but his former “brothers” as well. And given what nasty pieces of work the two thugs the Brotherhood sends after Hicklin are, there’s a good argument to be made he’d be better off in the hands of the law. Except, of course, Hicklin has no plans of going back to prison. Ever. Which makes Hicklin an extremely motivated and dangerous man, one who flashbacks to his time in prison demonstrate is every bit the ruthless, coldblooded killer as the two on his trail.

What raises Last Call for the Living head and shoulders above your standard shoot ‘em up, however, is the masterful attention to character development Farris has put into the story. For a man prone to extreme violence and hateful, racist language, Hicklin is actually so well developed – the prison flashbacks graphically explain why a man has no choice but to make alliances, even distasteful ones, inside to survive – that the reader finds himself actually caring about the character, even if you don’t exactly like him per se. This is especially true when it comes to Hicklin’s unusual attachment to his hostage, Charlie.

A nerdy, awkward, introverted young man, Charlie goes through life on autopilot with only his love of rockets dreams of getting a degree and working at NASA to keep him going. Initially overwhelmed by the situation – he pisses himself when the bank’s robbed and later faints dead away while at the hideout – Charlie slowly finds himself inexplicably drawn in by Hicklin, whose hardened and confident personality represent everything Charlie is not. It’s a relationship Farris nurtures and develops over the course of the story, leading Charlie, Hicklin, and the reader down a path which ultimately ends in both triumph and tragedy.

You see, despite all the fisticuffs and shootouts, and there is a spectacular one which takes place amongst the parishioners at a snake handling church, Last Call for the Living is at heart a character driven story, one which isn’t afraid to look at the dark side of human nature and explore evil as shades of gray and not an unyielding pitch-black. It’s a novel that recognizes sometimes a man actually wins by losing, least if it’s on his terms, and that even when one wins it can sometimes feel like a loss. Triumph and tragedy; they’re more closely linked than most people realize. Peter Farris certainly gets it, and if you read his amazingly nuanced Last Call for the Living you will too.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
AllPurposeMonkey | 4 autres critiques | Oct 2, 2012 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
7
Aussi par
2
Membres
84
Popularité
#216,911
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
6
ISBN
21
Langues
2

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