#12 Dave Robicheaux

Jolie Blon's Bounce

James Lee Burke
4.18
8,062 ratings 369 reviews
The Barnes & Noble Review James Lee Burke's fiction is haunted, sometimes quite literally, by the ghosts of history, and by a bone-deep apprehension of the human capacity for violence and cruelty. A case in point is the author's latest Dave Robicheaux novel, Jolie Blon's Bounce, a contemporary account of murder and madness whose plot reflects the lingering aftereffects of the antebellum South. The story begins with the shotgun murder of 16-year-old Amanda Boudreau and the subsequent arrest of Tee Bobby Hulin, a musically gifted young black man with a spiraling drug habit and a checkered criminal past. This initial murder is quickly followed by a second, the bludgeoning death of a prostitute with ties to the world of organized crime. The dual investigation that ensues leads Robicheaux -- together with his current partner, Helen Soileau, and his former partner in the New Orleans PD, Clete Purcell -- into the complex, interrelated histories of several New Iberia families, some rich, white, and powerful, some poor, black, and chronically underprivileged. The investigation puts Robicheaux in touch with the most vicious elements of Louisiana society, and with the darkest aspects of his own divided soul. Like most of Burke's fiction, Jolie Blon's Bounce is a rambling, loosely plotted affair notable for its powerful set pieces, its precise, sensual evocation of the Louisiana bayou country, and its flamboyant sense of character. Among the novel's most vivid creations are a sexually voracious defense attorney descended from a wealthy slaveholding family, a traveling Bible salesman with a penchant for violence, a former Mafia hit man with a tragic personal history, and a predatory, not-quite-human killer who goes by the name of Legion. Legion, a deliberate, over-the-top embodiment of absolute evil, is one of Burke's most remarkable creations. His presence, together with the corollary presence of a mad, possibly angelic figure known as Sal Angelo, lends this novel the faint, unmistakable aura of the supernatural that has characterized so much of Burke's recent fiction. As always, though, it is Dave Robicheaux himself -- a decent, violent, angry, loving, and deeply conflicted man -- who dominates the narrative. Robicheaux's distinctive character and his voice -- with its mournful power, its clean, rolling cadences, and its frequent flights of unforced poetry -- elevate this novel at every turn. Like the best of its predecessors (The Neon Rain, A Morning for Flamingos, Purple Cane Road), Jolie Blon's Bounce is bruising, moving, and beautifully composed -- an example of American crime fiction at its best and most highly evolved. (Bill Sheehan)
Genres: MysteryFictionCrimeThrillerMystery ThrillerDetectiveAudiobookSuspenseNoirSouthern
480 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
3217 (40%)
4 star
3412 (42%)
3 star
1196 (15%)
2 star
161 (2%)
1 star
76 (1%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by James Lee Burke

Dave Robicheaux Series

Lists with this book

To Kill a Mockingbird
Gone with the Wind
The Help
Best Southern Literature
1328 books2570 voters
The Big Sleep
The Maltese Falcon
The Long Goodbye
Best Hardboiled & Noir fiction
695 books871 voters
The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo
The da Vinci Code
The Girl Who Played with Fire
Best Mysteries from the 2000s
198 books129 voters
The Black Echo
The Concrete Blonde
Echo Park