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Paperback Blossom Book

ISBN: 0679772618

ISBN13: 9780679772613

Blossom

(Book #5 in the Burke Series)

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Book Overview

In the figure of Burke, Andrew Vachss has given contemporary crime fiction one of its most mesmerizing characters. An abused child raised in orphanages, foster homes, and prisons, Burke is a career criminal and outlaw who steals and scams for a living. In Blossom, an old cellmate has summoned Burke to a fading Indiana mill town, where a young boy is charged with a crime he didn't commit and a twisted serial sniper has turned a local lovers' lane into...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Burke meets the Lover's Lane Killer

Another Burke novel. Burke is an ex-con, gambler, thief and private investigator who knows the world of predatory criminals. When Burke is approached by a former prison buddy, he is obligated to help out his adopted brother, Virgil. Virgil's nephew is a suspect in a lover's lane killing. Burke has a full plate of tasks at hand: find out if the nephew is lying or is a sex-predator. If the boy is innocent, Burke must re-build the boy's confidence and protect the him from the inmates at the youth detention center. Next, Burke has to find the sex predator. As an ex-con, he can access information not readily available to police. As Burke, he can go places most people will not go. He meets Blossum, the sister of one of the murder victims. Together, they track down the sick-mind of killer. Aside from good crime fiction, writer, Andrew Vachss talks about how sex predators are made and not born. Always entertaining are Burke's friends, the Prof, (street hustler), Michelle (transvestite), Max the Silent(mute martial artist) and Mama (dragon lady/restaurant owner/crime boss). --Doug Setter author of One Less Victim: A Prevention Guide and Stomach Flattening

Burke meets the Lover's Lane Killer

Another Burke novel. Burke is an ex-con, gambler, thief and private investigator who knows the world of predatory criminals. When Burke is approached by a former prison buddy, he is obligated to help out his adopted brother, Virgil. Virgil's nephew is a suspect in a lover's lane killing. Burke has a full plate of tasks at hand: find out if the nephew is lying or is a sex-predator. If the boy is innocent, Burke must re-build the boy's confidence and protect the him from the inmates at the youth detention center. Next, Burke has to find the sex predator. As an ex-con, he can access information not readily available to police. As Burke, he can go places most people will not go. He meets Blossum, the sister of one of the murder victims. Together, they track down the sick-mind of killer. Aside from good crime fiction, writer, Andrew Vachss talks about how sex predators are made and not born. Always entertaining are Burke's friends, the Prof, (street hustler), Michelle (transvestite), Max the Silent(mute martial artist) and Mama (dragon lady/restaurant owner/crime boss).

Possibly the best of the series

By his own admission, Andrew Vachss isn't a particularly good "writer": his characters are caricatures who we know only by an unusual style of speech or odd clothing; the dialogue often devolves into rambling lectures directed at the reader; the plots are formulaic; and many of his novels (particular the more recent ones) seem focused far more on social commentary than Story . . . why, then, do I feel compelled to read everything he publishes? Because Burke is COOL. I could care less about any of his "crew" of regulars (a little Black man who carries a sawed-off and speaks only in rhymes, a huge Asian man who is the best martial artist alive but speaks only in a made up sign language, a bespectacled Jewish man who provides all sorts of high-tech weaponry free of charge and continually mutters about nazis, a "beautiful" transvestite who is a skilled con artist and talks unendingly about high fashion, and a Jamaican teenager who is a crackshot with a 9mm and makes an occasional comment in his distinctive dialect . . . you get the idea). The other characters are mere background (as well as a lesson to the reader in multicultural tolerance). Burke, however, is the driving force behind this series. An unlicensed private investigator who is a wanted fugitive with nothing to lose. A man with a single mission: make the freaks PAY (if he can save a kid, that's a bonus). I do not necessarilly think that Blossom is Vachss' best work (that'd be either Shella or Two Trains Running), but it is probably the most accessable and mainstream of all the books in his Burke series. Although it might be advisable to read the earlier volumes first, Blossom stands alone and could be read as your introduction to the series. Since Burke is out of the city and away from his crew, they are less of a distraction. In short, this is more of a "coming of age" story than the usual Burke theme (VENGEANCE). A teenage boy is accused of being a sex sniper because he lives in the area, is a loner, owns a rifle, and was found to have a stash of pornographic magazines. Burke interrogates him, and decides that he's not the type -- so, being the righteous outlaw that he is -- instead of handing him over to the law (to get beaten and raped by fellow inmates), he conspires to hide him out while Burke tracks the real killer. In the meanwhile, he teaches the immature and inept boy what it means to be a Man (honor, duty, dignity, etc). As it oft seems as if Burke is really Vachss' alter-ego, it's like getting "fatherly advice" from one of the baddest men alive. I enjoyed this book a great deal, and I highly recommend it to anyone who is unfamiliar with the series.

Burke hits the Hoosier State hunting a "piquerist." Unputdownable!!

"Blossom" is Andrew Vachss' fifth Burke novel, and while it is an excellent book, I would not suggest that those folks new to Burke's world make his acquaintance here. "Blossom" definitely stands on its own, but for a richer more comprehensive read you should have more background information. I do not have an addictive personality, but the Burke series is one of the most powerful in the crime suspense/thriller genre. I am totally caught-up in Vachss' complex characters and their mind-boggling escapades. Actually, forget the genre "bit," these novels belong in a class of their own. I began with book one - "Flood" - and never looked back. However, "Strega and/or "Blue Belle" are also good places to meet Burke and crew. And meet them you should if you are looking for well crafted fiction and you don't flinch at the gritty, seamy, darker side of life. Burke, is still in a funk after losing his woman, Belle. Then Virgil, and old cellmate, asks for his help. Rebecca, Virgil's wife, travels to New York hoping to bring her husband's "brother" back to the Indiana mill town where they live - and where the trouble is. Burke and Virgil are tighter than blood makes most brothers. There's no way our man can refuse - nor would he want to. Rebecca's teenage cousin Lloyd has been accused of a heinous crime he didn't commit...so he says. When the police don't have enough evidence to hold the boy, they remand him into Virgil's and Rebecca's custody on bail. Then the heat gets turned up. The press, out in full force, are looking for blood. A reporter hears some of Lloyd's classmates comment about his "peeping" habits and all hell breaks loose. Bail is revoked and Lloyd runs. Virgil goes after him and both are now in hiding. Virgil wants Burke to find out the truth about his cousin and about the "Son of Sam" type murders that have been going down in Merrillville, Indiana. The perp is a sex sniper...sometimes call a "piquerist." "It wasn't in the DSM-III, not even in the latest revised edition. It is a pathological condition: it means the realization of sexual satisfaction from penetrating a victim by sniper activity. Or stab wounds, or even bites." Is Lloyd the one killing the young couples who park in Lover's Lane? And if not, who is? Enter Blossom. A waitress and much more. She has her own reasons for wanting to catch the killer. Vachss continues to reveal more of Burke's character, his grim inner world and his past in "Blossom." He is one of the most complex protagonists I have encountered in popular fiction - edgy, dark, an outcast, as hard-boiled as they come, a scam artist who is a standup guy, a righteous man, and above all, a survivor. Burke, the man, and the strange folks who people his world and call him" friend," are what make me a faithful fan and keep me hooked on the series. The usual suspects are all present, including: Max the Silent, a Mongolian warrior who also calls Burke brother; Pansy is a warrior of another species - she's a Neapolitan m

Burke hits the road

Vachss takes Burke away from his crew and into the Midwest in "Bloosom," and in the process comes up with one of the best Burke novels. Some readers may miss his crew, but instead we get a lot of insight into Burke's history recounted as he strives to help out an old prison buddy. The title character is Burke's most interesting leading lady since Flood walked out of his life after the first novel. Overall, an exciting read pumped full of the philosophy of life by Burke.
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