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Sunset and Sawdust
Sunset and Sawdust
Author: Joe R. Lansdale
Sunset Jones has just killed her husband. Never mind that he was raping her: Pete Jones was constable of a small sawmill settlement called Camp Rapture, where no woman refuses her husband what he wants. So everyone is angrily surprised when, thanks to the amazing understanding of her mother-in-law--who owns three-quarters of the mill--Sunset bec...  more »
Audio Books swap for two (2) credits.
ISBN-13: 9780736699297
ISBN-10: 0736699295
Publication Date: 12/2003
Rating:
  • Currently 4.5/5 Stars.
 1

4.5 stars, based on 1 rating
Publisher: Books on Tape
Book Type: Audio CD
Other Versions: Paperback, Hardcover, Audio Cassette
Members Wishing: 0
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cwousn avatar reviewed Sunset and Sawdust on + 87 more book reviews
Lansdale's writing is like candy for the mind. He weaves words into a tapestry that fills one's senses. This story which apparently takes place in East Texas during the depression is a well-crafted narrative. Lansdale makes characters who are believable, resourceful, and sympathetic. As the story flows inexorably toward its climax, some secrets are revealed but all elements of the plot are satisfactorily addressed. An enjoyable read!
perryfran avatar reviewed Sunset and Sawdust on + 1173 more book reviews
Another very enjoyable novel from Lansdale full of his usual violence and wackiness. This is another of his stand alone novels published in 2004. I've read and enjoyed most of his Hap and Leonard series as well as several of his stand-alones. All have been very entertaining to say the least.

This one takes place during the 1930s in Depression-era East Texas. The main protagonist of the novel is a woman called Sunset because of her bright red hair. Her husband, Pete, the local constable, assaults and rapes Sunset who has had enough abuse so pulls Pete's gun and shoots him in the head. While this is happening, a tornado destroys their home. Battered and shaken, Sunset goes to confess her deeds to her mother-in-law, the owner of the local sawmill, who decides that Sunset was justified and decides that she should also take over as the local constable. Sunset is then thrown into an investigation of the corpse of a baby and soon thereafter a second dead body. The investigation leads to some unlawful shenanigans which involved her dead husband, some crooked city council members, and local Klansmen obsessed by greed.

This is a typical novel for Lansdale with some very eccentric characters, loads of violence, and a setting in East Texas. As in many of his novels, it also describes the inequities of the black community and how they always are taken advantage of. It does veer somewhat from the typical by being set in the 1930s but otherwise another fun ride from Lansdale.


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