The Devil (Audible Audio Edition) Ken Bruen Gerry O'Brien Random House Audio Books
Download As PDF : The Devil (Audible Audio Edition) Ken Bruen Gerry O'Brien Random House Audio Books
America - the land of opportunity, a place where economic prosperity beckons - but not for PI Jack Taylor, who's just been refused entry.
Disappointed and bitter, he thinks that an encounter with an over-friendly stranger in an airport bar is the least of his problems. Except that this stranger seems to know rather more than he should about Jack.
Jack thinks no more of their meeting and resumes his old life in Galway. But when he's called to investigate a student murder - connected to an elusive Mr K - he remembers the man from the airport. Is the stranger really is who he says he is?
With the help of the Jameson, Jack struggles to make sense of it all. After several more murders and too many coincidental encounters, Jack believes he may have met his nemesis. But why has he been chosen? And could he really have taken on the devil himself?
The Devil (Audible Audio Edition) Ken Bruen Gerry O'Brien Random House Audio Books
One could do worse than to live by the wisdom of Ken Bruen's rants as channeled through Jack Taylor - hard-edged bits of keen insight turning simple words into blunt objects aimed at your skull. Take a novel like "The Devil" - a less talented author would bloat this lean tour de force into a 500 page opus on good vs. evil, evoking only half the impact of Bruen's sparse prose which defies convention and hammers home a disturbing tale that you'll likely want to devour in a single (longish) sitting.While the Church always plays large in Bruen's unparalleled former Irish-guard Jack Taylor series of mayhem, remorse, guilt, and rebellion, never before has Bruen gone Biblical, casting his own chainsaw-rendered version of "Faust." Or so it seems. Taylor meets the mysterious Kurt - or "Mr. K," a debonair charmer who seems to always know too much while leaving a wake of death in his path. Taylor, whose typical diet of Jameson and Guinness has been rounded with Xanax, finds ample justification for staying drunk and high as those increasingly close to him fall victims to - apparently - the diabolic "K." In prior volumes of this fine series, Taylor has had his teeth kicked out, has been deafened in one ear, and beaten to a permanent limp, but never has he experienced fear in this extreme. By Bruen's standards, "Devil" follows an uncommonly tight and suspenseful plot - a thriller that mixes the supernatural and spiritual with iconoclast Taylor's patented brutality in overdrive - combining for gripping entertainment that just may breed some nightmares of your own.
From "Failed rebellions - What we do best" to "Irish women (who) do wrath like no other women on the planet," Bruen spins line after stripped-down line of gritty local color, the bare-knuckled Irish street bard who makes Frank McCourt read with all the edge of Sesame Street. I've loved every episode of Jack Taylor's wretched but curiously noble life - "The Devil" - if not the best - is arguably the most powerful of the batch. Frightfully well done.
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The Devil (Audible Audio Edition) Ken Bruen Gerry O'Brien Random House Audio Books Reviews
If you grew up in a Catholic household with lots of superstitions then you will relate to this book. Even though I am not Irish, I recognized many of the myths/superstitions about the devil. I would never knowingly read a book with the devil as a character. Just too scary for me. But this book is really engrossing and I finished it in one sitting. I love Bruen's Jack Taylor; he's a man's man. He is also flawed, angry, knows how to handle a gun, drinks huge quantities of alcohol, and yet manages without a steady paycheck. To those who are a tad bent out shape because of the supernatural tones in the book; Isn't an author allowed to change his style and try new things?
Not a big fan of the supernatural Satanic vibe in this one. Too much a crash course in the last chapter, like he just got tired of writing and wrapped up the book too quickly.
A Hell of a thing, The Devil, and while I'm a big fan of the Jack Taylor series this one went way too smoke and brimstone on me, with the lead bad guy, Mister K, not quite conjuring up a convincing whodunnit storyline. Ken Bruen offers up a lot of literary and philosophical insight with most of his books and tackles some interesting issues, BUT (and that's the eraser on the end of the pencil here) this book just didn't do it for me and fits in as a filler as part of the series; the small prayer bead on the rosary leading to a larger prayer. Like any hurler he stepped up with his talent, swung and missed but took a hell of a try.
First Sentence I should be in America.
Jack Taylor's second attempt to leave Ireland ends with Irish customs; his attempt at sobriety ends at the airport bar. The journey he does take is one of a mysterious stranger who seems to know a lot about him, and the death of those who come into Jack's life. Has the Devil come to Jack in this life rather than waiting for him in the next?
From the first page, and first chapter heading, I remember how much I love Bruen's voice. You hear and see Ireland in every word; and not just through the inclusion of the Gallic. There is a poetry to his writing and acknowledgement of one who has known the dark side of mankind.
The writing is impeccable and spare; not a superfluous word. The dialogue is spot on. The story is brutal and profane and not always pleasant to read. The brutality of the story is often offset by wry humor.
Jack isn't a character one is supposed to like. He is, however, one of the most compelling characters being written today. He is a dark angel; very dark, but you want him to survive and to succeed. With all the past books, I always felt the hope of possible redemption for Jack. In this book? Possibly not--but then again, possibly. For Jack, the reader cannot help but have hope.
This is the first time Bruen has introduced an aspect of the metaphysical, which I liked, and an ambiguous ending, for which I didn't care as much.
"The Devil" is a book of actual and metaphysical suspense. It is dark. It is sharp. It stays with you. This is a series which should be read in order. All I know is that I shall always read Bruen's next Jack Taylor book.
THE DEVIL (Noir/Metaphysical-Jack Taylor-Ireland-Contemporary) - VG+
Bruen, Ken - 12th in series
Minotaur Books, 2011
One could do worse than to live by the wisdom of Ken Bruen's rants as channeled through Jack Taylor - hard-edged bits of keen insight turning simple words into blunt objects aimed at your skull. Take a novel like "The Devil" - a less talented author would bloat this lean tour de force into a 500 page opus on good vs. evil, evoking only half the impact of Bruen's sparse prose which defies convention and hammers home a disturbing tale that you'll likely want to devour in a single (longish) sitting.
While the Church always plays large in Bruen's unparalleled former Irish-guard Jack Taylor series of mayhem, remorse, guilt, and rebellion, never before has Bruen gone Biblical, casting his own chainsaw-rendered version of "Faust." Or so it seems. Taylor meets the mysterious Kurt - or "Mr. K," a debonair charmer who seems to always know too much while leaving a wake of death in his path. Taylor, whose typical diet of Jameson and Guinness has been rounded with Xanax, finds ample justification for staying drunk and high as those increasingly close to him fall victims to - apparently - the diabolic "K." In prior volumes of this fine series, Taylor has had his teeth kicked out, has been deafened in one ear, and beaten to a permanent limp, but never has he experienced fear in this extreme. By Bruen's standards, "Devil" follows an uncommonly tight and suspenseful plot - a thriller that mixes the supernatural and spiritual with iconoclast Taylor's patented brutality in overdrive - combining for gripping entertainment that just may breed some nightmares of your own.
From "Failed rebellions - What we do best" to "Irish women (who) do wrath like no other women on the planet," Bruen spins line after stripped-down line of gritty local color, the bare-knuckled Irish street bard who makes Frank McCourt read with all the edge of Sesame Street. I've loved every episode of Jack Taylor's wretched but curiously noble life - "The Devil" - if not the best - is arguably the most powerful of the batch. Frightfully well done.
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