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Arkansas

par John Brandon

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1735157,652 (3.66)2
Kyle and Swin spend their nights crisscrossing the South with illicit goods, making shifty deals in dingy trailers, and taking vague orders from a boss they've never met. Soon their lazy peace is shattered with a shot: night blends into day filled with dead bodies, crooked superiors, and suspicious associates. It's on-the-job training, with no time for slow learning, bad judgment, or foul luck.… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 2 mentions

5 sur 5
“Finished with a tight flourish, yet meandered throughout. Some comical and memorable scenes but lacks the clean focus of his newer releases. Think, "Charles Portis meets Coen Brothers."

Notable quotes:

"Kyle smelled the grease and the dust. A clock ticked behind him. He had attempted working in the straight world and doubted he'd ever attempt it again. He couldn't believe people crammed their lives into belittling routines just for steady money. What was the big deal about getting money steadily? Was that so enticing, getting a tiny check made tinier by taxes every two weeks for the rest of your life, continually voicing the same stale complaints that working stiffs have been voicing for centuries, that the people in Kyle's apartment complex voiced each evening? Alarm clocks, layoffs, cigarette breaks, backaches, carpal tunnel syndrome, company parties, and always the steady little checks."

"She was a great lady," said Kyle. "Great lady." He ate a chip.
"When people act sappy after someone's dead, that means they feel guility."
"What do I feel guilty about?"
"How would I know?"
"I was always good to her."
"Not guilty about how they treated the person; guilty to have life and not know what to do with it."


"Your neighbor in the next condo is your best customer. His day job is carving cedar elves. A big company bought him out of his copyright, but they still sell a select line of elves hand-carved by the inventor. This man hates sleep. He hates to let time pass while he's not watching, and does not want to say, one day, that his life was short. He measures time in elves."” ( )
  runningbeardbooks | Sep 29, 2020 |
The people in these pages are so irresistibly ordinary, so petty, hopeful & crazy - most of the time. John Brandon is constantly expanding his convincingly detailed & riveting backdrops, the character histories that lull us repeatedly into a false sense of security while we know that inevitable explosions of violence loom close at hand. This is a unique debut with an Elmore Leonard exterior than thinly conceals a bleak core owing much to Samuel Beckett. - Adam
  stephencrowe | Nov 11, 2015 |
Arkansas has an interesting, if not very diverse, cast of drug dealing characters in the south. The story follows several of them, for a number of years in one case, as long as they remain alive. The violence, when it comes every so often, is vivid, but somewhat matter-of-fact and even inevitable.

Frog is a benevolent drug lord, but not to be underestimated. He and his loose group of dealers are the subjects of the novel. Kyle and Swin stumble into the drug trade, brought in by a park ranger named Bright, who soon turns up dead. Swin is a college dropout whose father took pleasure only in “salt water and Cuban sandwiches” before killing himself. After the two become “lost in a maze of their own fuckups” and loose ends that “were tangled all over each other like a wad of shoestrings” they become the targets.

The characters are all believable and memorable. Johnna is Swin’s girlfriend, pregnant with his baby. A middle-woman cut-out between Frog and lower level dealers is only known as Her. Tim and Thomas are Frog’s protégé brothers. Brandon keeps the suspense roiling and tells a good story in the process. ( )
1 voter Hagelstein | Jan 29, 2013 |
This is the first novel I've read by John Brandon, and it was his debut novel. The story is compelling and page-turning, although the characters are not exactly in an admirable business. The three main characters are two young drug runners, Swin and Kyle, and a drug boss, usually called Frog. Swin and Kyle sort of stumble into the business, and are portrayed in a sympathic way that makes you care about what happens to them, without glorifying what they do. The amount of money at stake is never huge, but it is more than they are used to having around. Swin and Kyle develop a close relationship, eventually ending up as phony park rangers at a state park in Arkansas. Events start to get out of control, as they always do in the drug business, and they start to look for a way out.

There is an unusual narrative structure in this novel. The chapters that are told from the point of view of Swin and Kyle are told in the third person, alternating between the two of them. The chapters told from the point of view of Frog are told in the second person ("You now have a modest nest egg--nearly twelve thousand dollars, plus another ten you'd already saved"). Frog is the most mysterious of the characters, but having his chapters told in the second person adds a personal touch to his character (the reason for this eventually becomes clear). Also, the chapters about Swin and Kyle are set in a short period of time, while the chapters about Frog begin several years earlier, and gradually catch up to the events of Swin and Kyle. To me, this added to the sense of separation between the two youths and their mysterious boss.

This novel has its comic moments, but it is ultimately a tragedy. At the heart of it is the relationship between Swin and Kyle. There are homoerotic elements to it, especially in a few scenes, but mostly they are just two guys who accidentally crossed paths and became friends in a dangerous life. ( )
  JJMcDermott | Sep 1, 2012 |
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Kyle and Swin spend their nights crisscrossing the South with illicit goods, making shifty deals in dingy trailers, and taking vague orders from a boss they've never met. Soon their lazy peace is shattered with a shot: night blends into day filled with dead bodies, crooked superiors, and suspicious associates. It's on-the-job training, with no time for slow learning, bad judgment, or foul luck.

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