Down River (Readers Circle Series) | 
| Author: John Hart Publisher: Center Point Large Print Category: Book
List Price: $32.95 Buy New: $30.10 You Save: $2.85 (9%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 46 reviews Sales Rank: 288555
Format: Large Print Media: Hardcover Edition: Lrg Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 446 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.5 Dimensions (in): 8.5 x 6 x 1.5
ISBN: 160285100X Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6 EAN: 9781602851009 ASIN: 160285100X
Publication Date: December 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand new Item. CD, DVD, Book, VHS more than 400 000 titles to choose from. ALL days Low Price !
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| Customer Reviews: Read 41 more reviews...
More than a Story May 16, 2008 John Hart is a new drama-suspense literary talent that will out-rival the others in his genre. This story is so much more multidimensional than the best selling who-dunits of the last 10 years. John vividly portrays the human nuances of complex interpersonal relationships and emotions whilst telling a most riveting and suspensfull tale.
Adam is banished from Eden, but the serpent lives on May 12, 2008 3 out of 6 found this review helpful
Adam Chase was barely acquitted of a young man's murder five years ago despite his stepmother's testimony against him. His father chose to abide by his wife and asked Adam to leave the family farm. Adam leaves Rowan County, North Carolina with his memories of an idyllic childhood by the river, and spends the next five years nursing his wounds in New York City. Now he's back, his best friend, Danny Faith, wanting to speak to him in person about some life-altering decision. But Danny's disappeared and soon Adam is once again the town's suspect in a beating, an arson, and murders that follow. To clear his name once and for all, Adam tracks down the real killer and in the process, resurrects the pain that has crippled his family.
Reading `Down River' by John Hart is like stumbling into a Tennessee Williams play, but with the heat turned up--way up. It's about greed, secrets, murder, backstabbing, front stabbing, and what Williams called "mendacity." Awash in hyperbole, it's a hothouse of emotions, where everyone speaks and acts as if someone ought to be named Brick and the daddy here, Jacob Chase, ought to be Big Daddy. There are no stiff upper lips to be found--everyone emotes and anger doesn't just percolate, it boils over. This isn't the Antebellum South; laden with atmosphere and family dysfunction, it practically shrieks Southern gothic. Mr. Hart's penchant for melodrama suits his theme quite well and even if it gets unwieldy at times, it's a decent mystery that entertains.
A true page turner. May 6, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
According to most of the people in Rowan County, North Carolina, acquittal was a term used by the courts when they didn't have enough evidence to convict a man. It had nothing to do with guilt or innocence. Adam Chase was guilty of murder. His step-mother had even testified against him. The acquittal meant nothing.
Adam Chase was tried for a murder he did not commit. After going through an ordeal like that, Adam knew he could deal with the suspicion, animosity, and outright hostility, but his father's betrayal cut to the quick. He couldn't handle that. Jacob Chase chose to believe his wife's version of the story rather than his son's. Left with few alternatives, Adam turned his back on his family, friends, and Rowan County. In New York City he would be an anonymous face in the crowd. The past and the future would no longer matter.
Adam was wrong. Five years had passed and the walls he built around his heart were thick and solid, but one phone call from a childhood friend asking him to come home, and the walls started crumbling. Adam was no longer insulated from the pain. There would be no peace until he returned home and set things right.
There was trouble brewing in Rowan County and Adam's unexpected return added fuel to the fire. The friend that summoned him home had disappeared, and when a family member was assaulted, the cops looked at Adam with suspicion. Was the trouble dogging his family stemming from the past, or was it related to the latest controversy involving the proposed nuclear power plant? The nuclear power plant would give the town and the county a much needed economic boost, but his father's refusal to sell the land needed for it had stalled the project.
Unable to bridge the gap between himself and his father, Adam considered heading back to New York, but then the first body surfaced. It was found in an isolated cavern on Chase land. Adam knew he couldn't turn his back on his friends and family again. He had to ferret out the truth. He owed them that.
Down River is an incredible story about relationships, revenge, and retribution. Written from Adam's point of view, it was easy to understand his attitude and why he did what he did. But John Hart took it one step farther. His secondary characters are not treated as secondary characters, but as an integral part of the story. I felt their pain and understood their motives as surely as I did Adam's.
If you haven't read Down River yet, I highly recommend it. It is the second novel written by John Hart and I am looking forward to the next one.
A good read. April 14, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
My thought, after reading the first two chapters of this book, was something like, 'Wow! This writer really has a distinctive voice.' By the end of the book that voice was less distinct, or at least I had some trouble differentiating between Hart's and Grisham's voices. Nevertheless, this author has taken some cliched southern characters and situations and breathed literate life into them. I enjoyed the story, but more than that I enjoyed the relationships drawn between the male characters, living and dead. The protagonist, Adam Chase, is someone who, although I could not identify with him, I totally believed in his reality. And also that of his father, adopted brother, the cops, the family friend and the family enemy. Where my belief broke down was when it came to the female characters: They were too cliched, too one-dimensional, with one exception and that was Sarah Yates. She was a fresh character, and one I believed in. That inability to write a 3D, living, breathing woman is one shared by a number of bestselling authors, including Grisham, and although I have enjoyed early works by such authors I usually become fatigued and drop them from my 'must read' list. Hart may last longer if he can remedy this one fault, because I truly loved the internal dialogue of his protagonist and those finely drawn relationships/conflicts with the other men -- I thought that the writing there was brilliant. I liked this book, and I'm hoping for even better ones.
Don't miss this one! April 12, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I listened to the unabridged audio version of this book--it was excellent! I have not read John Hart's first book, but it's next on my list. While the NYT review compares Hart's style to Scott Turow, et.al., he reminds me more of one of my favorite authors, James Lee Burke. If you're a Burke fan, I highly recommend Down River. BTW, the narrator of Down River also sounds very similar to the reader of James Lee Burke's audio books, Will Patton, who has an amazing voice for storytelling.
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