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Paperback American Skin Book

ISBN: 1932112499

ISBN13: 9781932112498

American Skin

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Stephen Blake is a good man blown in bad directions. He and girlfriend Siobhan, best friend Tommy, IRA terrorist Stapleton, and a particularly American sort of psychopath named Dade, are all on a collision course somewhere between the dive bars of New York and the pitiless desert of the Southwest. This is the long-awaited American novel by Ken Bruen, the hard-boiled master of Irish noir.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

One Solid Rip

This one, in spots, is as brutal as they get. In other spots, it's equally insightful and melancholy. The references come in torrents -- poets, musicians, authors. I've never seen a book reference Rory Gallagher before so Bruen gets extra bonus points for that, right there. The mix of Irish attitude and the harsh American desert southwest, both Tucson and Las Vegas, make this a special read. How Bruen mixes so much plot into a brief, spare book is also a classic example of how less truly is more. This is not for the squeamish, though, and comes with a caution that the territory here is rough and the roads lead to some very bleak places.

Irish noir peers into the American dark psyche

Irish noir meister Ken Bruen offers his prickly, ironic, and often humorous view on what it means to wear "American skin". Stephen Blake who served in the English army does a bank heist with his Irish pal Tommy and IRA sniper Stapleton. The botched attempt sends Blake packing to New York City, and then west to Las Vegas and Tucson. Extreme violence and hard living are the currency in the modern noir (and sometimes real) world. The whacko Dade addicted to Tammy Wynette and dope is sure to become a classic villain like Hannibal Lecter. Fans of George Pelecanos and Bruce Springsteen should enjoy reading Mr. Bruen's seamless, satiric, and, yes, unsettling American Skin.

A dark and hilarious nightmare of a book

AMERICAN SKIN by Ken Bruen is a dark, hilarious nightmare of a book that stretches genres and concepts. Bruen's work in general and this novel in particular mines the dark places in the human psyche where Cormac McCarthy so frequently visits, though from a different side of the mirror. While McCarthy's work is almost unrelentingly grim, AMERICAN SKIN is informed with a ferocious humor that has you screaming both with laughter and in horror. Bruen is not a native of the United States, but he is a keen and canny observer of the landscape that most residents behold only from moving vehicles whose windows are up and whose doors are locked. AMERICAN SKIN is evocative of a number of novels --- everything from William Burroughs's NAKED LUNCH to Leonard Cohen's BEAUTIFUL LOSERS, from Norman Mailer's WHY ARE WE IN VIETNAM? to James Joyce's ULYSSES --- with Bruen bouncing characters dead and alive around time and distance in this tale of greed, love and revenge, and the unintended consequences that result from all. Stephen Blake is the primary figure in this dark vision, a Galway native who has reached a decent if rough middle age. His life consists primarily of working in a CD store, romancing a lovely bank clerk and drinking at a local pub. When given the opportunity to participate in an IRA-related heist, Blake agrees, the result of a deathbed promise and a misplaced and reluctant loyalty. Things, we are informed early, go badly, but Blake and a conspirator gamely carry on, with Blake traveling to the United States to execute the rest of the plan in the somewhat unlikely locale of Tucson. Blake's immigration is the first step that puts him on an unforeseen and unintended collision course with an American homegrown psychopath named Dade, a tightly wound chaotic force of nature whose instinct inclines toward random acts of spontaneous violence. Bruen goes deep into the psyche of each and all concerned in AMERICAN SKIN, with a canny understanding of the inclination of men toward violence and destructive relationships, and the connections linking acts that at first blush appear unrelated. Ostensibly a stand-alone book, AMERICAN SKIN reaches a haunting conclusion that may well be a prologue to a future event. Regardless, this is a significant work loaded with memorable characters, electrifying incidents and walking nightmares. Very highly recommended. --- Reviewed by Joe Hartlaub

"Cross this bloody river to the other side"

If Ken Bruen isn't the premier writer of noir pulp fiction today, he is certainly the most brutal. "American Skin" is Bruen's latest release, probably his most violent, and quite possibly his best - assuming you have a stomach for carnage and an appreciation for black Irish fatalism. Yeah, this is darker than black, the nonlinear tale of Steven Blake, a Blake of infamous the Irish Galway Brakes, an ex-soldier and current drifter who unwittingly is drawn into an IRA bank robbery. Supporting Blake in Bruen's rush of halting prose that lurches and jags beautifully through 280 pages of despair and bloodshed are not one but three of the most despicable villains you're ever likely to encounter in a novel. There's Dade, the American psychopath who kills randomly for pleasure, Stapleton, and IRA terrorist with no remorse, and Sherry, a female version of Dade in a Dolly Parton skin. But there is much more to this tragedy than gore and butchery. Bruen's rendering on the friendship between Blake and Tommy - the link to the IRA heist - is painfully rendered with an unmistakably Irish sorrow. Likewise, masterful foreshadowing plots the course for a climax that can only end in despair, but with all great fiction, the payoff come alone the ride. If you're looking for cardboard hero role models and happy stories, you've probably never heard of Ken Bruen, and should probably keep looking. But if, like an Irishman, "you're only happy when your melancholy", then "American Skin" is a must read.

A nice nasty crime thriller

If you like your crime novels Irish and rough, this is one to go for. In this stand-alone novel, Bruen combines a lively plot, a protagonist with lots of people out to get him, and a whole lot of popular music references (starting with a nod to Springsteen in the title).
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