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Locust Alley

Locust Alley

List Price: $15.00
Your Price: $12.75
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Locust Alley good read for buffs, amateurs alike
Review: Don Evans' "Locust Alley" is a good read for Civil War buffs as well as casual students of the epic war and its time period. Impeccably researched, the novel's plot not only provides a decent mystery to vex the brain, but also gives an unadorned snapshot of Richmond, Va., during the war. A great book for a beach weekend or a rainy day, "Locust Alley" is nevertheless not for the faint-hearted or puritanical. Evans tells of Civil War-era soldiers and sleazeballs, prostitutes and profiteers, without holding back. Overall, a very thoroughly researched mystery written well.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Wartime Richmond Dectective Novel
Review: In this novel, all the parts are in place and the machine works pretty well. Wartime Richmond is captured in period detail: streets and building locations, interiors of hotels, prisons, and government offices, meals, clothes, smells, animals, etc. Characters are distinctive and memorable; the appearance of Lee and Stuart are a little distracting but they stay within character. The motives for crimes in question are well hidden but a bit outlandish; yet 'suspension of disbelief' is accepted because the background stories and the period detail works so well in the hands of a good writer. I bought this book for the historic location and was not disappointed. Also, as a mystery reader, I finished the last page thinking that I wouldn't mind seeing another with the same main character.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Wartime Richmond Dectective Novel
Review: In this novel, all the parts are in place and the machine works pretty well. Wartime Richmond is captured in period detail: streets and building locations, interiors of hotels, prisons, and government offices, meals, clothes, smells, animals, etc. Characters are distinctive and memorable; the appearance of Lee and Stuart are a little distracting but they stay within character. The motives for crimes in question are well hidden but a bit outlandish; yet 'suspension of disbelief' is accepted because the background stories and the period detail works so well in the hands of a good writer. I bought this book for the historic location and was not disappointed. Also, as a mystery reader, I finished the last page thinking that I wouldn't mind seeing another with the same main character.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Suspence and Sleaze in the Civil War
Review: Mr. Evans has given us a thrilling story about the underbelly of Richmond during the last year of the Civil War. The story is an intricate ensemble piece with characters as diverse as prostitutes, assassins, wandering, disfigured vets, a Yankee POW and historical figures such as Jeb Stuart and Robert E. Lee. Their stories are intertwined masterfully like a historical version of Robert Altman's "Nashville." We get the high and the low, in Locust Alley. The gore and the glory, and all of it is presented with a keen eye for human detail (as opposed to the merely historical detail, which, to me, often comes across as showing off). The novel focuses on Rand, a vet-turned-police officer obsessed with solving a grisly murder case in a town that is being swallowed up by war and corruption. Rand also has one arm, and has his only hand full trying to protect a beautiful prostitute, a would-be victim of a maniacal and terrifying killer. Can a broken man and a fallen woman find a semblence of love under such circumstances? That's the heart of the novel, and the ending packs a wallop to boot.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Nitty, Gritty Wartime Richond
Review: This is not so much a book about the War but about people, and a rich pallete of personalities it offers, from a cold-eyed predatory asassin out to kill Robert E. Lee to the proverbial prostitute with a heart of gold. In between you meet the ordinary folk of war-time Richmond doing their best to survive the last year of the war, corrupt police and government officials, a rabid rebel-hating Ulric Dahlgren, Jeb Stuart's high-spirited troopers, an unlikely ally dragged out of Libby Prison to aid the hero in his quest to find the assasin and a host of other colorful characters of all pedigrees (or lack thereof). Richmond is described colorfully (you can almost hear the racket in the streets and smell the mud and cigar smoke) with an ironic eye that catches the humor in nearly every situation that emerges from the pages. Characters are richly developed with dialogue that would do Larry MacMurtry proud. As you'd want from any mystery, there are lots of surprises and more than a few moments of nerve-wringing suspense. I read a lot of historical fiction and this is a writer I'd love to hear from again.


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