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Lost Souls

Lost Souls

List Price: $23.95
Your Price: $16.29
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An Irishman who knows our local history.....
Review:

This was my first reading of a work by Michael Collins, who I met at an informal book signing in Dowagiac, MI. He has somewhat adopted this small town, approximately 25 miles north of Notre Dame University where he had a athletic scholarship to run on their cross county team and graduated from their Creative Writing School. He is truly representative of the "fighting Irish" as he was born and raised in Limerick, Ireland.

Lost Souls is a murder who-done-it that will keep you turning the pages to find out the next twist, which to me, is one important test of a mystery novel along with not too much side-show but enough to know where you are and who the people in story are. This is the book to take on your next trip or maybe tonight, if you want to read something you can't put down...and this is even the time of year to tie-in with the story, Halloween!
Collins use of a small Midwestern town, maybe not unlike Dowagiac, provides a comfortable feel for plain surroundings and easy to identify characters. There is a level of realism in the way the author develops the characters which reminded me of folks I've met along the way.

He takes us on a journey, begun with the murder of a child dressed for tick or treat but it is only the first of many murders. It is told to us by Lawrence the local cop, who himself is going through many life crisis. He seems to know what he should do but at each fork in the road he takes the easy path, yet his life continues to spin out of control. We meet some people who are suspects not just to the murders but doing their best to cover up the facts. They like Lawrence have their own demons and Michael gently inserts many clues to help or not, yet urges us on to the next chapter to find out more.

This is not an Irish author writing a small town Midwestern mystery but an author who knows about story telling. In the best tradition of Irish writers he is able to tell us a story without the pain and suffering from the old sod about his adopted land. There is something special in those Irish genes for spinning a great yarn!

I am sure we will be reading much from this very talented writer. Lost Souls is well worth your reading and I look forward to his next book

Bill Higgins
Higgins721@aol.com


Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Beautiful Writing, but geez
Review: I hate to go against the grain of all the other reviews on this page written by much more articulate readers than me. Yeah, this guy can write like only a few other authors I've read. Beautiful prose. But about half way through this book, I started hoping that the main character would either go ahead and suicide or get to an AA meeting. I mean, the despair was just relentless. And being a refugee from small town America myself, I can certainly recognize a few of the characters, but dam! every citizen in this town is a cretin. It's like that photographer, Diane Arbus or whoever, and how she was able to photograph probably a fairly normal person and bring out something sort of funky and corrupt in them. I will probably read more by Michael Collins, if just for the writing, but I'll approach the book with a bit more distance.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Lost Lives
Review: If a title can sum up a book, Lost Souls captures this brilliant, heartbreaking tale of desperation in small town America. The first chapter ends with an account of a child's death so haunting it made me cry.

Working with a conceit of costumes and masks, a dead child amidst a pile of leaves, to a boy in a ET mask, to a quarterback in a helmet, to hints at a KKK past of dark secrets, this book flits between a cold realism and gothic details as a cop central to the coverup of the little girl's death becomes embroiled in a web of political and emotional turmoil.
Part psychological, part sociological portrait, Lost Souls has the pace of a thriller, but the resonance of a deeper story, and through the latter part, in sequence of a breast cancer examination at the mall, to a trip through an immigrant ghetto on the outskirts of Chicago, the novel takes on an elevated sense of power and insight, marking Collins as one of a few writers of true social conscience.


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Quiet Nightmare
Review: In a seamless story of actual loss (the death of a child), and a more ethereal emotional loss that permeates this sad, but honest, novel, author Michael Collins, continues to mine a slice of the American psyche we may not want to stare into. Lost Souls is David Lynch's Blue Velvet meets Mystic River, a surreal realism that takes readers into the dark psyche of a town.

Bleakness permeates this novel, a cop who has pulled a gun on his wife, divorced and unable to pay child support, a cop who is pulled into a cover up of a supposed hit and run on Halloween night in a small mid-west town. The inevitable trajetory of the novel is not hidden, but what Collins does is take us deep into the sense of despair and moral crisis facing so many people in economic ruination. There are trenchant passages of brilliant insight within this novel, and amidst a surreal story where the bodies pile up, Collins pulls off an uncanny, and amazing masterpiece of literary suspense.


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Lost Souls - Nightmarishly Real
Review: Lost Souls is a disturbing nightmare of a small town trapped in a nether world somewhere in the Midwest. It reminded me of the Sweet Hereafter in the detailed, atomistic detail of small lives within small towns. The air of melancholy is powerful, and the honesty of the portrait of entrapment riveting, if not depressing.

The cop who takes up through the nightmarish cover up of the mysterious death of a child on Halloween night is a shell-shocked divorced father who takes us through a gut wrenching opening chapter that ends in the finding of the small child among leaves at the side of the road. The cinematic effect is so strong. At times I felt like I was watching a movie, the cuts between chapters are so stark as the novel moves through the various lives within the town.

The plot is really strong, filled with believable twists as the cover-up evolves and people start dying. I guess the fated sense of the inevitable captivated me. The novel is retold by the cop and it wasn't until I read some reviews here that I realized that was how the book took on an added density.

As a qualifier I have to say my wife did not read past Chapter One. We have two little girls and she said she could not continue reading the book. She said it was not the gore, because there is none really in the book, rather it was the heart rendering description of the dead child that got to her. She said she saw our daughters in the leaves and just put the book down. She called the chapter nighmarishly real.


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Blood on the Scarecrow
Review: Not far into Lost Souls set in a small Midwest town, I got a feeling I was within the world of John Mellencamp, a world of little pink houses and small lives. If a Mellencamp song could become a ballad, then Lost Souls is that ballad, a fable-like story of the death of a small child on Halloween that spawns a tragic tale of loss and death.

Lost Souls is one of the most beautiful, and yet tragic novels I've read in ages. Told through the eyes of a first person narrator, Lawrence, the cop who uncovers the dead child amidst a pile of leaves in an angel's costume, we get a narrative that flits between a shimmer of literary genius and the cold, stark reality of the lives lived within the novel. Only Carver and Richard Ford have handled the subtleties of lower class life with such profound dignity and compassion. The lives in this book are rendered with a tragic pathos.

The novel's structure is so in keeping with the narrative voice, a twice told tale, a cop remembering, reliving a nightmare period in his and the town's life. The sense of retelling, the inevitable tragic outcome gives the book its weight and density. Brilliantly advanced through a sequential telling of events, the narrator brings the mystery to focus through his eyes and fears. We feel the mounting tension and drama. The shortness of the chapters is a compelling stylistic device that keeps this story racing toward an ending that cannot be predicted, but illuminates the power of the author. In a slight of hand, I felt this was not just a murder story, but something deeper. It's elegiac in its compassion but also in its realism, and from my California beach property I was transported for a few days into the far flung denizens of the plains who also call themselves Americans.
After reading the book, its undertow of a book is so strong I went down for a swim, to cleanse myself of the novel. I mean that in a good way. I remember surfacing and looking back at my house and feeling glad my ancestors had moved West with their dreams of gold and the ocean.


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Gothic Tale of Murder and Redemption
Review: The almost gothic aura of Lost Souls comes early in the image of a dead child dressed in an angel's costume discovered dead in a pile of leaves by the side of the road on Halloween. The opening chapter sets the tone for Lost Souls, a ruminative, down and out, divorced cop who muses on his dead end life before he discovers the body.

Collins sets up the main cop with a moral choice. The cop is asked by the mayor and chief of police to participate in a cover up of the child's death, and in exchange the cop (Lawrence) will get the police chief's job when the chief retires. The cop agrees, though reluctantly, and what ensues is a twisted plot of deceit and series of murders spawned from the original death of the small child.
Chillingly real, the high school scenes are reminiscent of so many murders at our high schools over the years. The cop in his dead pan first person voice gives a brutally honest account of the souls of all the characters within the novel. He is neither complimentary nor degrading in his opinions, rather the chilling details of the lives lived in this Lost Town are all too real.

In our reading group we felt Lost Souls was a great murder mystery, a genunine page turner packed with a range of great characters, and though we as readers go through the valley of hell through much of the novel, it does end with a believable, redemptive quality which we though was in keeping with the novel. The main character, though flawed, is essentially good and after all the murders that take place in Lost Souls, it is to the author's credit that he could offer a different vision toward the end of the novel.
Lost Souls is one of our picks for the year so far.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A solid murder-mystery
Review: The story begins with the discovery of the body of a little girl who appears to have been killed in a hit-and-run, through the eyes of the policeman who has found the body and is meant to investigate the case, while getting sucked deeper and deeper into power games.

As the characters' lives intertwine in an ever-growing circle and the plot twists and turns, I was glad for the short chapters that make it the perfect read on a commute!

On the downside, it seems to round up in a bit of a rush, leaving a few questions unanswered, but still a good read.


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Last Hopes of a Small Town
Review: `Lost Souls' is the perfect example of how the most beautiful and haunting prose can be created within the crime fiction genre. This book goes beyond genre type casting. It's a story about a small town in the Mid-West's slow disintegration and the cost it's willing to pay for a last gasp of air before it goes under.

Just past midnight on a Halloween night in 1984. A local cop, Lawrence, feeds his dog Max and himself after a long day. Both Max and Lawrence have a mean case of separation anxiety two years after Lawrence's divorce. They both lead a mostly sedated day to day existence and a long weekend at a cabin in the woods may by just what they need.

But, a call arrives that destroys this apathetic existence and reveals a small fissure in their small town existence.
A three-year-old girl is missing. After putting her daughter to bed at nine o'clock, Lisa Kendell passes out on her living room couch. A cold draft awakens her to her open front door and her missing child.

Max sniffs out a pile of leaves on the street in front of the mother's house. Pushing the leaves aside, Lawrence find the broken wings of an angel costume. The little girl had been dead for hours. Stepping back, Lawrence could see the zig zagging tire tracks that lead to the small pile of leaves. It's obvious to him the child is the victim of a hit and run.
A witness him leads him to a trace on a pick-up scene tearing away from the crime scene. It belongs to the town's star quarterback, Kyle Johnson. The town has pinned all its ragged hopes on the eighteen year-olds shoulders in the coming state play-offs. The mayor and the chief of police let Lawrence know, in no uncertain terms, that it would be better for everyone if the investigation led away from Kyle.

With the mayor's bargaining chip of a past transgression to hang over Lawrence's head and the hollow promise of a better future, Lawrence feels he has no choice to comply. When he goes to the boy's house, he disregards all evidence pointing to Kyle. He even grants forgiveness and penance after a hasty confession from the boy.

It is Lawrence's clinging to the carrot the mayor's hold just out of his reach that begins the slow, insipid whirlpool that pulls all the players in. There are too many people, with too much to hide from themselves and others, to keep everything from imploding. Not wanting to see what is happening to them, everyone turns from the truth. A truth that hides in plain sight. A truth that could hurt, and yet save the lives that are left.

Only when Lawrence has emerged from the undertow for the last time, does he grasp what has really happened and that all along he had the power to do something about it.

At times `Lost Souls' was painful to read and yet reading it was compulsory. Collins has a way of writing that is so fine and so subtle that you don't notice the silken threads of plot wrapping around you tighter and tighter. A vivid and powerful first person narrative instantly involves the reader in Lawrence's plight. And all the reader can do is read on as Lawrence stumbles in the dark, just out of reach of safety.

Collins has established his sharp, storytelling ability with `The Keepers of Truth' and `The Resurrectionists'. His characters are like wolves that bite their own paws off to free themselves from self-made steel traps. What compels the reader to keep turning the pages is the sense of `there but for the grace of God go I.' And the sense that this little town, and all of it's player's, are waiting just beyond the county line to act out their denouement.


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