Synopsis/blurb…..
God, drugs, corruption, and morality come
together in this gripping tale of desperation
In Gasconade County, Missouri—once called the meth capital of the world—Deputy Sherriff Dale Banks discovers $52,000 hidden in the broken-down trailer that Jerry Dean Skaggs uses for cooking crystal. And he takes it. Banks knows what he did was wrong, but he did it for all the right reasons. At least, he thinks so. But for every wrong, there is a consequence.
Jerry Dean can’t afford to lose that $52,000—he owes it to his partners and to a crooked cop. He also can’t afford to disappoint the crazed and fearsome Reverend Butch Pogue, who is expecting Jerry Dean to deliver the chemicals the reverend needs for his next batch of meth. To avoid the holy man’s wrath, Jerry Dean sets in motion a series of events that will threaten Banks’s family, his life, and everything he thinks he knows about the world.
In Gasconade County, Missouri—once called the meth capital of the world—Deputy Sherriff Dale Banks discovers $52,000 hidden in the broken-down trailer that Jerry Dean Skaggs uses for cooking crystal. And he takes it. Banks knows what he did was wrong, but he did it for all the right reasons. At least, he thinks so. But for every wrong, there is a consequence.
Jerry Dean can’t afford to lose that $52,000—he owes it to his partners and to a crooked cop. He also can’t afford to disappoint the crazed and fearsome Reverend Butch Pogue, who is expecting Jerry Dean to deliver the chemicals the reverend needs for his next batch of meth. To avoid the holy man’s wrath, Jerry Dean sets in motion a series of events that will threaten Banks’s family, his life, and everything he thinks he knows about the world.
Matthew
McBride's new novel, A Swollen Red Sun, is rough and ready suspense,
encompassing a wide array of characters from the sour side of life, and
smashing them together with vigorous and blunt prose." —Daniel
Woodrell, author of The Maid's Version and Winter's Bone
"The
words practically vibrate off the page in Matthew McBride's amped-up and
intricately-plotted novel about meth freaks and dirty cops. Filled with scenes
of both tremendous brutality and heartrending compassion, it is the best
fictional depiction of the current drug epidemic raging across the Midwest that
I have ever read." —Donald Ray Pollock, author of Knockemstiff and
The Devil All The Time
Praise from two authors who I have
read and enjoyed, always has me optimistic as opposed to merely hopeful when embarking
a new book!
I do like reading books concerning drugs, drug dealers and
drug users – perhaps I’m an addict! Add in a mess of cops – straight, crooked
and one halfway in-between – we’ll call him conflicted. Throw in an odd-ball, disturbed
preacherman; the one with two wives, one of which is chained up in the cellar
with a ball-gag in her mouth. Even the crooked cops won’t venture onto the
mountain where Rev. Pogue is cooking up his crystal!
Dale Banks is the cop who cashes in after kicking over a mess
of cat litter during a raid. Banks, a family man and an otherwise honest cop up
until this point at least, succumbs to the temptation, in full knowledge of
repercussions further down the road. Banks endangers his young family and
straight-laced partner with his impulsiveness, but doesn’t regard returning the
money as a viable option.
As events escalate and spiral into further violence; Jerry
Dean - $52k light – hatches a plan to recover his money and with a glint of
ambition in his eye, rescue Pogue’s young ball-gagged wife whilst taking over
Pogue’s operation. All the while, Banks is trying to figure out who he can
trust to combat the growing threat to him and his family and Banks’ nemesis on
the force, a man with political aspirations starts cleaning away any links to
his involvement in the meth trade.
Fast and violent. Not everyone’s cup of tea but certainly mine.
Extremely enjoyable, with an ironic twist at the end.
5 from 5
I have Matthew McBride’s
debut sat on the pile, the enigmatically titled – Frank Sinatra in a Blender.
To be enjoyed soon, I think.
I can’t find a website for him, but he’s on Twitter (@matthewjmcbride)
I accessed this one via Net Galley. A Swollen Red Sun is published and available now from Mysterious Press.
Let's be honest, probably not my thing. But I'm glad you found yourself a 5, there haven't been many lately have there? Meanwhile I'll go off and find a crime story where the lace trimming on the dress and the lipsticks beside the body are the real clues...
ReplyDeleteNot really up your street, I'd agree. You're right not too many 5's - previous months they seem to be like buses. A few come along together. I'm still thinking about the last book I read - The Red Right Hand - 4 or 5, 4 or 5?
ReplyDeleteHope to see something suitable on CiB later today or worst case tomorrow, or else!
Don't get your hopes up today, but actually I have recently read Red Right Hand too....
DeleteTRRH - hopefully appearing on the blog soon, it would be hard to pass up an opportunity to highlight Corkscrew's fancy attire! (See what attention I have been paying to the clothes.)
DeleteCol - It sounds like the setting and context are well done here. I'll have to admit; it's not my sort of thing. But I'm glad you found yourself a 'winner.' It's always a treat to find a book that words really well.
ReplyDeleteMargot definitely more me than you. Like you and Moira say - great to have a winning book a few times a month!
DeleteCol, this looks like the kind of book I'd slip in between the ones I'm usually comfortable reading. I don't particularly like reading about drugs and drug dealers but then as policy goes never say never to any book.
ReplyDeletePrashant, it's not a book that would appeal to everyone. I do like the kind of book where large elements of the cast are outsiders living their life in the margins where crime and criminality is a way of life, as opposed to the everyday law abiding types, where the crime is committed as an out of the ordinary act,
DeleteFast and violent. Well, if I need a book for Missouri I will consider this. I love the cover. (I don't know how I missed commenting on this. I have been slowing down in all areas lately, but I do try to catch up now and then.)
ReplyDeleteTracy, the cover is very striking. I would hazard it may be too gritty for you, but there's an interesting twist to it which may redeem it. Thanks for catching up!
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