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Harbor Lights

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A dynamic, gripping collection of short stories from "America's best novelist" (The Denver Post), the New York Times bestselling James Lee Burke.
Harbor Lights is a story collection from one of the most popular and widely acclaimed icons of American fiction, featuring a never-before-published novella. These eight stories move from the marshlands on the Gulf of Mexico to the sweeping plains of Colorado to prisons, saloons, and trailer parks across the South, weaving together love, friendship, violence, survival, and revenge

A boy and his father watch a German submarine sink an oil tanker as evil forces in the disguise of federal agents try to ruin their family. A girl is beaten up outside a bar as her university-professor father navigates new love and threats from a group of neo-Nazis. A pair of undercover union organizers are hired to break colts for a Hollywood actor, whose "Western hero" façade hides darkness. An oil rig worker witnesses a horrific attack on a local village while on a job in South America and seeks justice through one final act of bravery.

With his nuanced characters, lyrical prose, and ability to write shocking violence in the most evocative settings, James Lee Burke's singular skills are on display in this superb anthology. Harbor Lights unfolds in stories that crackle and reverberate as unexpected heroes emerge.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 16, 2023
      Burke (Every Cloak Rolled in Blood), best-known for his Edgar-winning Dave Robicheaux mystery series, proves his versatility as a storyteller in this textured collection. The title story revolves around James Broussard, a middle-aged oil and gas engineer in 1942 Louisiana who remains traumatized by his combat duty in WWI France. When Broussard and his young son, Aaron, witness a capsized tanker burning in the Gulf of Mexico, he reports the calamity anonymously without explaining why to Aaron. Later, at a restaurant, two federal agents attempt to intimidate Broussard into keeping silent about the tanker. Instead, he pokes a hornet’s nest by telling the local newspaper. In “The Assault,” a history professor is outraged after police refuse to investigate his daughter’s beating at a bar, which happened while she was drunk. He takes matters into his own hands, and ends up facing a difficult moral choice. Throughout, Burke manages to conjure his characters’ worldview in a few artful brushstrokes (Aaron in the title story dreams about “harbor lights that offer sanctuary from a world that breaks everything in us that is beautiful and good”). These impressive stories establish that Burke doesn’t need a whodunit plot to catch a reader’s attention. Agent: Anne-Lise Spitzer, Philip G. Spitzer Literary.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      The eight performances here provide depth to the settings of these evocative short stories. Themes of race and class are covered, offering fascinating windows into lives on the fringe. Among the standout moments: Alan Carlson exquisitely conveys the violence and ethical dilemmas a professor faces when his daughter is attacked and the police do nothing. Gary Furlong captures a challenging father-and-son dynamic after they witness a tanker capsize. And Leon Nixon captivates when a professor and son are trapped in a rural town during a road trip. The listening experience may be deliberately disorienting as settings and timelines shift, but the soundscape never loses rhythm or pacing, or breaks its spell. S.P.C. © AudioFile 2024, Portland, Maine

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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