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James Sallis

    21 de diciembre de 1944

    James Sallis es un escritor de novela negra, poeta y músico estadounidense cuya obra se adentra en los aspectos más oscuros de la naturaleza humana y la moralidad. Su estilo distintivo se caracteriza por una prosa austera, una atmósfera potente y un profundo impacto logrado a través de una narración concisa. Sallis a menudo explora las complejidades de personajes imperfectos y sus viajes a través de paisajes sombríos, revelando verdades profundas en el proceso. El ritmo y el tono de su escritura a menudo están influenciados por su profunda conexión con la música jazz y blues.

    Difficult Lives Hitching Rides
    The Killer Is Dying
    Moth
    Bluebottle
    Eye of the Cricket
    Ghost of a Flea
    • Ghost of a Flea

      • 312 páginas
      • 11 horas de lectura

      The mystery of private investigator Lew Griffin is revealed in the conclusion of this critically acclaimed, groundbreaking series. In his old house in uptown New Orleans, Lew Griffin stands alone in a dark room, looking out. Behind him on the bed is a body. Instead of speaking, he reflects on his life—his failing relationship, his missing son, the fact that he hasn’t written in years—and how the two of them ended up there. In a novel as much about identity as about crime, the answers to Lew’s personal mysteries begin to become clear in the series’ brilliantly constructed climax.

      Ghost of a Flea
    • Eye of the Cricket

      • 336 páginas
      • 12 horas de lectura

      Finding people is what former private investigator Lew Griffin excels at. The terrible irony is that the exception is his own missing son. Dreams, memories, and reality run together to form his own darkest night. Lew Griffin is a survivor, a black man in New Orleans—a teacher, a writer, and an ex-detective. Having spent years finding others, he has lost his son—and himself in the process. Now a derelict has appeared in a New Orleans hospital claiming to be Lewis Griffin and toting a copy of one of Lew’s novels. Learning the truth is a quest that will take Griffin into his own past as he tries to deal with the present: a search for three missing young men.

      Eye of the Cricket
    • Bluebottle

      • 216 páginas
      • 8 horas de lectura

      "As Lew Griffin leaves a New Orleans music club with an older white woman he has just met, someone fires a shot and Lew goes down. When he comes to, he discovers that most of a year has gone by since that night. Who was the woman? Which of them was the target? Who was the shooter? Somewhere in the Crescent City-and in the white supremacist movement crawling through it-there's an answer. But to get to it, he is going to have to work with the only people offering help, people he knows he should avoid"-- Provided by publisher

      Bluebottle
    • Moth

      • 288 páginas
      • 11 horas de lectura

      Lew Griffin, now fifty years old, has abandoned his former career as a New Orleans private investigator for the safety of teaching. But his old life draws him back. One of the very few lights from Lew Griffin’s dark and violent past has flickered out. His one-time lover, LaVerne Adams, is dead—and her daughter, Alouette, has vanished into a seamy, dead-end world of users and abusers, leaving behind a critically fragile premature infant daughter. Griffin is determined to keep his distance from the dangers of the New Orleans night. But his inescapable obligation to an old friend keeps bringing him back like a moth to a flame.

      Moth
    • The Killer Is Dying

      • 241 páginas
      • 9 horas de lectura

      A hired assassin searching for a rival killer, a burned-out detective with a terminally ill wife and an abandoned youth surviving by his wits follow inextricably linked paths toward community acceptance in the unforgiving sunlight and sprawl of Phoenix. 20,000 first printing.

      The Killer Is Dying
    • Exploring the lives of crime fiction pioneers Jim Thompson, David Goodis, and Chester Himes, this collection features James Sallis's insightful biographical essays that highlight their struggles and contributions to the genre. Originally published in 1993, it offers a unique literary investigation into these enigmatic figures who reshaped crime writing yet lived in relative obscurity. Accompanied by a new introduction and a curated selection of essays and reviews on other legendary noir authors, the work showcases Sallis's poetic and sympathetic approach to literary scholarship.

      Difficult Lives Hitching Rides
    • A year or so has passed since the events of Cypress Grove. Ex-policeman, ex- con, former therapist, Turner has become Deputy Sheriff in the small town within driving distance of Memphis, Tennessee, to which he had migrated in hopes of escaping his past. His life is mending as he and Val Bjorn grow closer. And then a young man, arrested on a routine traffic stop with more than $200,000 in his trunk, is forcibly sprung from jail after Sheriff Don Lee is brutally assaulted. Throwing caution aside, Turner goes in pursuit to Memphis, unleashing ghosts he thought he had left behind, and endangering all that matters to him now.

      Cripple Creek. Dunkle Vergeltung, englische Ausgabe
    • Black Hornet

      • 256 páginas
      • 9 horas de lectura

      With this flashback novel to Lew Griffin’s past, James Sallis takes readers to 1960s New Orleans, a sun-baked city of Black Panthers and other separatists. A sniper has fatally shot five people. When the sixth victim is killed, Lew Griffin is standing beside her. Though they are virtual strangers, it is left to Griffin to avenge her death, or at least to try and make some sense of it. His unlikely allies include a crusading journalist, a longtime supplier of mercenary arms and troops, and a bail bondsman.

      Black Hornet
    • The Long-Legged Fly

      • 256 páginas
      • 9 horas de lectura

      As much a classic detective story as it is a literary masterpiece, The Long-Legged Fly introduces us to Lew Griffin: tough, smart, and living in a corner of society where life is fought for as much as it is lived. In steamy New Orleans, black private detective Lew Griffin has taken on a seemingly hopeless missing-person case. The trail takes him through the underbelly of the French Quarter with its bar girls, pimps, and tourist attractions. As his search leads to one violent dead end and then another, Griffin is confronted by the realization that his own life has come to resemble those of the people he is attempting to find.

      The Long-Legged Fly
    • Few American writers create more memorable landscapes - both natural and interior - than James Sallis. His highly praised Lew Griffin novels evoked classic New Orleans and the convoluted inner space of his black private detective. Two years have passed since Turner's amour, Val Bjorn, was shot as they sat together on the porch of his cabin.Then the sheriff's long-lost son comes ploughing down Main Street into City Hall in what appears to be a stolen car. And waiting at Turner's cabin is his good friend, Eldon Brown.

      Salt River