Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » body art - tattoo » General » Down River  
Categories
music
h.r. giger
vampire: masquerade
esoterica
apparel
video
body art - tattoo
jewelry
HALLOWEEN
women's boots
men's boots
Info
about us
links
posters
Related Categories
• General
Literature & Fiction
Subjects
Subcategories
Classics
Down River
Down River

zoom enlarge 
Author: John Hart
Creator: Scott Sowers
Publisher: Macmillan Audio
Category: Book

List Price: $39.95
Buy New: $12.96
You Save: $26.99 (68%)



New (31) Used (17) from $12.96

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 74 reviews
Sales Rank: 257104

Format: Audiobook, Cd
Media: Audio CD
Edition: Unabridged
Number Of Items: 10
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 5.8 x 5.1 x 1.6

ISBN: 1427201935
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6
EAN: 9781427201935
ASIN: 1427201935

Publication Date: October 2, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Perfect condition. Satisfaction guaranteed. Inventory subject to prior sale.

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Down River
  • Mass Market Paperback - Down River
  • Paperback - Down River
  • Perfect Paperback - Down River
  • Hardcover - Down River
  • Hardcover - Down River (Readers Circle Series)
  • Paperback - Down River
  • Kindle Edition - Down River
  • Audio Download - Down River: A Novel (Unabridged)

Similar Items:

  • The King of Lies
  • In the Woods
  • Midnight Rambler: A Novel of Suspense
  • Hold Tight
  • Chasing Darkness: An Elvis Cole Novel (Elvis Cole)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Adam Chase has spent the last five years in New York City trying to erase his worst memories and the scorn and abandonment of his family. Then a phone call from his best friend awakens in him a torrent of emotion and pain. Having left North Carolina and its red soil for good, he never thought returning would be easy—but being remembered as a murderer doesn’t help much. Adam is beaten, accosted, and hostilely confronted by his family, including Grace, the young woman whose abandonment torments him still.

Then people start turning up dead.

Within this small Southern town, John Hart explores the lengths to which people will go for money, family, and pure greed—and whether or not forgiveness is ever attainable.


Book Description
John Hart's debut, King of Lies, was as powerfully captivating as it was lyrical. Janet Maslin in the New York Times said "There hasn't been a thriller as showily literate since Scott Turow came along." On the heels of his astounding success, Hart once agains embarks on an exploration of human nature that proves neither time nor distance is the healer of old wounds.
Adam Chase has spent the last five years in New York City futilely trying to erase his worst memories and pound into forgetfulness the scorn and abandonment of his family. Until a phone call from his best friend awakens in him a torrent of emotion and pain.
Having left North Carolina and its red soil for good, he never thought returning to town, certainly not a small Southern one, would be easy—but being remembered as a murderer didn’t help much. Within hours of arriving, Adam is beaten, accosted, harassed, and then confronted by his family, including Grace, a young woman whose abandonment torments him still.
Then people start turning up dead.
And Adam has a dark streak, a history of violence that predates his acquittal five years earlier. Everyone doubts. No one trusts, and he realizes that nothing has changed in five years. Even his family is closed to him.
With each page, emotions are torn ragged—family secrets brought to the surface, scorned lovers return, and townspeople who are engaged in a heated debate over a lucrative land deal are only too easily led across the brink of irrational behavior. Within this roiling small Southern town, John Hart tests the lengths to which people will go for money, family and pure greed—and just whether or not forgiveness is ever attainable.



Customer Reviews:   Read 69 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Hart successfully explores the boundaries of the southern gothic   October 5, 2007
 149 out of 157 found this review helpful

When Adam Chase gets a call from childhood friend Danny Faith pleading with him to return to Rowan County, North Carolina, he's understandably reluctant to do so--after all, many of the citizens of Rowan (among them his stepmother) believe him to be a murderer, mistakenly set free some five years prior. But, friendship wins out, and Adam finds himself back home some three weeks later.

Adam's homecoming is extremely painful for him, as it brings him back into contact with those who abandoned him, and those he in turn abandoned. Things are further complicated by Danny Faith's abrupt disappearance, and by a rekindled romance with Robin Alexander, a local law enforcement official. When a family member is assaulted, Adam is suspected of committing the crime. When people start dying around him, Adam finds himself in the eye of an unfortunate storm--the only way out is to unravel a web of secrets so dense it staggers the imagination.

How good is John Hart? Well, Publisher's Weekly commented that Down River "should settle once and for all the question of whether thrillers and mysteries can also be literature." Amen to that. Hart's agile prose leaps off the page and resonates in your consciousness, transporting you inside the mind of Adam Chase and to the environs of Rowan County. Hart deftly explores the boundaries of the southern gothic without lapsing into the grotesque, delivering an engrossing, bittersweet reading experience that expertly evokes the likes of William Faulkner, Thomas Wolfe, John Grisham, and John Berendt while maintaining its own unique perspective and voice.



5 out of 5 stars Impossible to put down   October 2, 2007
 69 out of 76 found this review helpful

I thought John Hart had a remarkable beginning with The King of Lies, a book which captured me and kept me glued to the page as it wove together a southern baroque small town family oriented sense of fantasy, reality, and mystery in a way that is totally believable. However, he may have surpassed himself in Down River, a novel which I found impossible to put down and which carried the sins of the past into the crimes of the present and the pain of the future with a human, personal touch that was endlessly gripping. I cannot recommend it too highly if you are interested in the human condition, the complexity of people, or the nature of southern gothic traditions. I believe that John Hart is going to become a writer that many readers look forward to every year for his latest volume. This certainly builds on King of Lies and continues his development as a major fiction writer.


5 out of 5 stars Like a Pebble in a Pool...   October 9, 2007
 39 out of 41 found this review helpful

...Mistakes usually leave that ripple, sometimes deep, sometime shallow, that flow outward in astonishing ways. If I could give this author 10 stars i would. His book is about a particular family, but I've been a member of a family with members that I saw in the pages of his book. Adam Chase leaves home under a cloud of suspicion, stays away five years and then comes back. People then begin to die, or are discovered to have died, people are hurt, memories that have been hidden rise to the surface and you, as as reader, keep turning the pages, faster and faster. The author writes with depth, with knowledge of how we hurt each other, and shows us tenderness, frustration and dispair. The book blurb says you will remember this story long after you've read the last lline, and that is a true statement. I couldn't recommend a book more. Good job, John Hart.


3 out of 5 stars Easy, pager-turner...   January 6, 2008
 26 out of 28 found this review helpful

Adam Chase was erroneously arrested for murder five years previously principally due to his stepmother's testimony. He was released due to the jury's inability to find a motive. However, the small town, his Father, step-mother and many others turned on him during the arduous process and still believed that he was the killer. Chase left his family and his lover behind and vanished to NYC. After five years, he returns to his small southern town with a hope of finding his family, forgiveness and his relationship with his girl. Upon his return, he quickly gets entangled in a series of murders and he's again under suspicion.

The murder mystery kept me engaged throughout with many potential suspects and motives. The novel was a compelling and quick read albeit "light and fluffy." I found the plot, while unpredictable, also unbelievable in certain passages which impacted my rating of the novel. This book was an enjoyable page-turning romp.



5 out of 5 stars Great Story   October 18, 2007
 10 out of 11 found this review helpful

Five years after fleeing to New York in the wake of a murder acquittal, Adam Harston returns to North Carolina and to a hostile family, only to find himself trapped in the middle of a new case of violence, greed, family secrets, and murder as the people around him begin to die and he becomes the prime suspect in the crimes.
When I was reading this I was reminded of the Author Pat Conroy, who's novels are both emotional, literate and dramatic. That's John Hart in a nutshell. Betrayals, lies, thrills and an excellent writing style made this novel one you want to finish in one sitting.

Highly recommended.


Powered by Associate-O-Matic

T-shirts, Posters

Pentagram T-shirts, bags, etc...


Gothic Posters


Antique Map Reproductions


Che Guevara shirts
and accessories


Terra Naturals - All Natural Products






© Darkpub.com 2001-2007. All rights reserved. Domain Registration and Hosting