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Eli Cranor

Autor/a de Don't Know Tough

4+ obres 182 Membres 10 Ressenyes

Obres de Eli Cranor

Don't Know Tough (2022) 115 exemplars
Ozark Dogs (2023) 64 exemplars
Broiler (2024) 2 exemplars

Obres associades

Trump: Utopia or Dystopia? (2018) — Autor — 6 exemplars

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Another Edgar award nominee.I found the narrative voice a bit jarring at first, but got used to it. This book comes into its own as you reach the end, exploring family and small town dynamics
 
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cspiwak | Hi ha 5 ressenyes més | Mar 6, 2024 |
This is better plotted than Cranor's first book and a bit more exciting. The ending is better, though not without a few problems of illogic and incompleteness. This is probably not endorsed by the Arkansas Bureau of Tourism, especially since Cranor says it is based on a true story. It needs a little more resolution at the end, and despite all the things we find out about the characters as we go along, Cranor still doesn't show us much below the surface. But as a good noir tale, it succeeds. It would probably make a better movie--in the right hands.… (més)
 
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datrappert | Hi ha 3 ressenyes més | Mar 4, 2024 |
I'm torn between 3 1/2 stars and 4 stars for this one. On the good side, this is well written and buzzes along with no lulls. On the downside, some of the characters, including very important ones like the coach's wife, are not as well fleshed out as they need to be. On the surface, her motivations are clear, but the more I think about it, the less it holds up. It's like there's some secret the author isn't sharing. Probably because he doesn't know it himself. The coach's religious enthusiasm also seems tacked on. It isn't clear in which foster home he picked it up, certainly not that of his future wife and her father (also a coach)--or if he did, the author hasn't made it clear. Lots of great scenes here, but the reckless daughter ends up being the most interesting character. Not sure that was intended. The football player at the center of all this mess is also a difficult, semi-literate voice to portray, and I'm not sure Cranor gets it right. But, I haven't lived in the depths of Arkansas. (Depths of Alabama to be sure, but not the same.) I've talked myself down from 4 to 3 1/2. In any case, this is still well worth reading and I will read (or listen to) the author's next book. This audiobook version was well done.… (més)
½
 
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datrappert | Hi ha 5 ressenyes més | Feb 7, 2024 |
This originally appeared at The Irresponsible Reader.
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I've been trying to write about this book since April. I know I'm not going to do this justice, and so I keep procrastinating. But with 2 posting days left this year...I can push it off no longer.

WHAT'S OZARK DOGS ABOUT?
One of the bigger hurdles for me in completing this post was figuring out what to put here, I toyed with:

It's by Eli Cranor, which means it's going to have a Southern Noir sensibility, is probably going to have something to do with family, and is going to be excellent. That's all you really need to know.

I still stand by that, but figure you need more, I just wasn't sure what to say. I've finally given up and am just going to paste what Soho Crime has on their website (which, frankly, gives away more than I would've).

After his son is convicted of capital murder, Vietnam War veteran Jeremiah Fitzjurls takes over the care of his granddaughter, Joanna, raising her with as much warmth as can be found in an Ozark junkyard outfitted to be an armory. He teaches her how to shoot and fight, but there is not enough training in the world to protect her when the dreaded Ledfords, notorious meth dealers and fanatical white supremacists, come to collect on Joanna as payment for a long-overdue blood debt.

Headed by rancorous patriarch Bunn and smooth-talking, erudite Evail, the Ledfords have never forgotten what the Fitzjurls family did to them, and they will not be satisfied until they have taken an eye for an eye. As they seek revenge, and as Jeremiah desperately searches for his granddaughter, their narratives collide in this immersive story about family and how far some will go to honor, defend—or in some cases, destroy it.

CONSEQUENCES
Don't get me wrong—there's plenty of crime, tension, drama, and all the rest in the novel's "today." But in a very real sense the novel isn't about any of that. It's about what happened almost two decades before this that set the families on their courses and what the outcomes of those courses are.

This is a book about ramifications, consequences, pigeons coming home to roost—however you want to put it. When you read about those earlier events a part of you is going to ask, "Why didn't Cranor write about that?" Most—or at least many—authors would've, and then some would've added something like this as a sequel. Or maybe as Part II in a longer novel.

Cranor's not about that, though. His focus is on what those events do to the present. How they've shaped the lives of those in the present (primarily without their knowledge or understanding), and how the sins of the fathers can be visited on their sons and daughters.

THE AUTHOR'S NOTE
Frequent/Regular readers will know that I almost never mention this kind of thing when I talk about a novel. Do read this one after you finish reading about the Fitzjurls, the Ledfords, and the rest.

Unless I miss my guess, you'll agree with every syllable.

SO, WHAT DID I THINK ABOUT OZARK DOGS?
This, like Cranor's first novel, would be really easy to over-hype, so I'm going to try to be restrained here.

The prose is so sharp, so...on point. You can tell every syllable was considered, if you read portions of this aloud (or, I'm sure, listen to the audiobook) you will feel the work that went into it—although it's so smooth and flowing that it comes across as effortless. You see exactly what Cranor intends you to see, probably feel what he intended, and understand the motivations (even the ones that disgust you) of these people in precisely the way he planned.

The dialogue is so well done that you might find yourself sounding a bit like someone from Arkansas for a day or two after you finish.

These characters—it's hard to think of them as characters, really, they're people. People you can imagine seeing on the news or in a documentary about all this. It won't be the most flattering documentary about anyone, I should add. I think every single one of them crosses a line—more likely many lines—that they've known their whole life they wouldn't cross, at least have resolved they wouldn't cross again years ago. But they do, sometimes with regrets, sometimes with eagerness. And your heart breaks for them, even for some of them that you hope horrible things happen to by the end of the book. Fully developed, fully realized, very human (read: fallible and flawed) characters on every page.

Earlier I said this book is about consequences, and that's stuck with me for months. But it's also about devotion—sometimes devotion that borders on obsession. Devotion to a cause, devotion to an idea, devotion to yourself, or (the most dangerous?) devotion to a person (or group of people). There's a straight line between every character and what they're devoted to and those consequences.

But if you don't want to think about books like that—and you're just looking for a great read? Ozark Dogs fulfills that, too. It's a full-throttle, action-packed, revenge-driven, thrill ride with great fight scenes, enough blood and guts to satisfy the reader looking for that, and some twists and reveals that'll stun you.

Cranor gives us another thriller that you can give to an anti-genre snob, who'll appreciate it as much as people who only read Crime Fiction/Thrillers will. If you haven't read him yet, do yourself a favor and get this (and Don't Know Tough) now and start waiting for his July release while you're at it.
… (més)
 
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hcnewton | Hi ha 3 ressenyes més | Jan 11, 2024 |

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Obres
4
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1
Membres
182
Popularitat
#118,785
Valoració
½ 3.6
Ressenyes
10
ISBN
13

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