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Hell's Bay [Hardcover]

James W. Hall (Author)
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)


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Book Description

February 5, 2008

Master of suspense James W. Hall’s Hell’s Bay sends Thorn deep into the wilds of South Florida, in a story with all the haunting atmosphere of Deliverance and the sheer terror of Cape Fear.

 

Descended from pioneer stock, the Bateses are an aristocratic Floridian family with vast holdings in real estate and mining. When matriarch Abigail Bates is discovered drowned in the Peace River, a chain of events is set into motion, embroiling Thorn with a family he never knew he had and a fortune he doesn’t necessarily want.


Thorn is leading a fishing expedition into the isolated lakes and mangrove swamps of Hell’s Bay when Abigail’s son and beautiful granddaughter arrive, claiming Thorn as a long-lost relative and asking him to solve the woman’s murder. Little do they know that the killer is already on their trail. Soon their houseboat becomes a precarious island of safety in a landscape of escalating violence. What does the killer want? And why is their predator so enraged, determined to kill them all no matter what the cost?


As Marilyn Stasio said in The New York Times, “If violence can be poetic, Hall has the lyric voice for it.”  In this tour de force of fear and suspense, Hall shows how one family’s dark past comes back to haunt its most remote member---and may ultimately cost him his life.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Edgar-winner Hall (Magic City) puts a Southern gothic twist on his latest Florida thriller to feature his iconic hero, Key Largo beach bum Thorn. While helping old flame Rusty set up a houseboat deep in the Everglades as a fishing spot for tourists, Thorn becomes entangled in the intrigue surrounding the murder of Abigail Bates, a wealthy land and mine owner. Soon after, one of Rusty's first customers, John Milligan, confronts Thorn and claims to be Thorn's uncle, making him face old family secrets possibly connected to Bates's murder. Thorn's detective friend, Sugarman, at Thorn's request, starts making possibly dangerous inquiries into the crime. The appeal of this multilayered novel lies in the authenticity of its evocation of the Everglades, along with a slow-burning plot that kicks into high gear when Thorn and Rusty's guests, cut off from the outside world by sabotage, are hunted by Bates's killers. The result is another compulsive page-turner from a master of suspense. Author tour. (Feb.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

“A masterful writer.”---James Patterson

 

“No writer working today…more clearly evokes the shadows and loss that hide within the human heart.”---Robert Crais

 

“The king of the Florida-gothic noir.”---Dennis Lehane

 

“Delivers taut and muscular stories about a place where evil always lurks beneath the surface.” ---Michael Connelly

 

“I believe no one has written more lyrically of the Gulf Stream since Ernest Hemingway.” ---James Lee Burke


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Minotaur Books; First Edition edition (February 5, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312359586
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312359584
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.3 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #858,719 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

25 Reviews
5 star:
 (11)
4 star:
 (11)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (25 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Do Not Even Think About Missing This One!!, February 14, 2008
By 
This review is from: Hell's Bay (Hardcover)
James W. Hall is at the top of my "must read list" and "Hell's Bay" justifies that position. It is the best novel I have read in a long time. Hall's characterizations are amazingly fully developed and believable. However, as always, he stunningly captures the sights, smells, and sounds of the Everglades and the Florida Keys to such an extent that the swamp almost becomes a physical character in the final confrontation and climax.

Hall's loner and iconic hero, Thorn, finally gets a full name and fleshed out identity in this installment. Daniel Oliver Thorn knew nothing of his family tree since his parents died in an auto accident on the way home from the hospital after his birth. Suddenly, John Milligan and his daughter Mona schedule a maiden fishing excursion on a new houseboat owned and outfitted by Thorn's former lover and pal, Rusty Stabler, who has convinced Thorn to serve as guide and first mate.

Thorn is shocked and frozen with conflicting emotions when informed that John is his long lost uncle and Mona his cousin. The man with no history beyond his personal memories suddenly discovers he is a scion of one of the wealthiest families in Florida and an heir to Bates International, a multi faceted and multi layered conglomerate perhaps most infamously known for its strip mining of phosphates in central Florida which has made it a hated entity by citizens and community alike--especially when a cancer cluster is identified in Summerland, site of a large gypsum stack thought to be carcinogenic.

A number of intriguing plot threads are engaged by this meeting between Thorn and members of his family that ultimately intertwine and lead to a suspenseful and violence filled climax deep in the Everglades that reduces its human protagonists to the same primeval state of the swamp itself. The storyline actually splits into two major threads as the so called mothership heads deep into the Everglades on its purported fishing excursion carrying Thorn and his ill fitting and suspiciously unlikable newly found family members. A dangerous stalker appears and soon threatens, then rains chaos on the excursion. Why? Who is the stalker and what is the motivation? How does it tie to Thorn and his newly discovered ancestry? What is the real agenda of his relatives and their sudden decision to take this trip with Thorn?

Simultaneously, Thorn's great friend, Sugarman, heads to Summerland to investigate Thorn's background and the recent drowning death of his 86 year old grandmother, Abigail Bates. Was it murder as declared by Mona Milligan or the accident described in the police report? What is the relationship, if any, of the violence and hatred in Summerland and the attacks on Thorn's fishing expedition? What are the real motivations of Timmy Whelan, Summerland's sheriff, to whom Sugarman is both attracted and conflicted.

Hall's pacing and attention to detail make this an enthralling read as the suspense heightens unbearably toward an explosively primal confrontation where purely survival instinct battles an avenging spirit. Indeed, as mentioned, the isolation and vulnerability of the protagonists in the Everglades who fight for their very survival against man as well as nature raises this book to a special level for this reader. I cannot recommend it more strongly!!!
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13 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Another Winner from James W. Hall, February 23, 2008
By 
nobizinfla "nobizinfla" (Windermere, Florida USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Hell's Bay (Hardcover)

James W. Hall is masterful at creating villains.

It is not just that they never consider the moral consequences of their deeds, carry violence to an art form, create a combination of terror and tension---it is their "nothing to lose attitude" that is most frightening.

The fact that you know these people actually exist is genuinely terrifying. You sense them in real life, and cross the street to stay out of their path.

In Dr. Hall's latest Thorn novel, such a piece of work is Sasha Olson. Her outrage stems from the early death from cancer to her husband and the same disease ravaging her son. She blames it on Bates International who controls a gigantic phosphate strip mining operation in the middle of Florida.

Sasha's initial victim is the Bates International's family matriarch, Abigail Bates. Her preferred macabre method is death by drowning. Immediately before she places her prey under water she asks, "How long can you hold your breath?"

Abigail turns out to be Thorn's grandmother. Thorn's parents were killed in an auto accident shortly after he was born. He never knew about his family tree.

Thorn's uncle and his daughter appear to be clients on a fishing expedition where Thorn acts as a guide.

Sasha is on a mission to wipe out the Bates family. She haunts and hunts the family members deep in the remotest part of the Everglades. The outcome is in doubt until the final chapter.

The characters will hook you just as much as the plot that has as many twists as the Everglades. You just may want to sleep with light on after you experience "Hell's Bay."




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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "How long can YOU hold your breath?", April 24, 2008
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This review is from: Hell's Bay (Hardcover)
James W. Hall writes gritty outdoor adventure novels, usually set in Florida near or on the water. Hell's Bay is more of the same, and marks the return of hard-bitten hero Thorn, who signs on to be first mate aboard the first voyage of former lover and female fishing guide Rusty Stabler's new houseboat. The houseboat will act as a base for daily forays deep into virgin fishing grounds.

The first surprise comes when the client, whose name is Milligan, addresses Thorn by his full name, Daniel Oliver Thorn. Nobody knows his name. He's a Conch, and he has only one name; Thorn. Naturally, there are forces at work he does not understand, and soon he will play a major part in a game that began long before he agreed to make the trip with Rusty. A game that began with the question, "How long can you hold your breath?" and ended with the drowning death of one Abigail Bates, 85, principal shareholder and owner of Bates International, a huge multinational conglomerate.

Thorn is a careful man. He sends his detective friend Sugarman to investigate the activities of Bates International, but Abigail Bate's killer, a woman named Sasha, has already learned that the Milligans, who are next in line to succeed at Bates international, have chartered a houseboat to go fishing on Hell's Bay.

Sasha blames Bates for her husband's death from lung cancer, and her teenage son, just accepted to Yale with a full scholarship, is about to die from the same disease.
They have a motto: head of the snake. They know what needs to happen next, and they are prepared and more than capable of making it happen.

When Sugarman learns Bates International mines Gypsum and piles the radioactive residue in 80 million ton, twenty-story stacks 300 acres at their base, and that an elementary school with an astonishingly high student mortality rate not only borders a nearby stack but has been built with cinder blocks made from the waste, he is able to identify the killer and learn that she has already left to attack the charter fishing party.

But will he be able to warn Thorn in time?

Deep in the Everglades, beyond the reach of cell phones, Thorn has learned something too: he is Abigail Bate's nephew, and she has left a controlling interest in Bates International to him.

"How long can you hold your breath?" Sasha asks her next victim during the long, dark, disastrous night that follows, and the story accelerates from there to its slam bang conclusion. Recommended for lovers of outdoor adventure.

Art Tirrell is the author of 2007 adventure novel, "The Secret Ever Keeps" - set on and under Lake Ontario.

"Simply put...the best underwater scenes I've ever read." Meg W - reviewer



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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
TWIST FOR TWIST, CURVE FOR curve, the two-lane road tracked the ancient meander of the Peace River through the sun-battered Florida scrubland. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
yellow bass boat, gyp stack, gypsum stack
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Abigail Bates, Carter Mosley, Bates International, Sasha Olsen, Timmy Whalen, Peace River, John Milligan, Pine Tree School, Sheriff Whalen, Daniel Oliver Thorn, Mona Milligan, Key Largo, Horse Creek, Broad River, Rusty Stabler, Sheriff Timmy, Annette Gordon, Upper Keys, Uncle Johnny, Charlie Kipling, Ponce de Leon Bay, Wood River, Cardiac Bay, Gulf of Mexico, Quentin Thorn
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