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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A wonderfully evocative read
I do not understand the basis for the Kirkus reviewer's objections. The plot is in no way overly complicated, the language, "casually obscene" as it may be, fits the characters to a tee, and there are some of the most evocative descriptions that I have ever read. As an example, the description of Miss. Porterfield and the music box on pages 94 and 95 of the...
Published on May 13, 1999

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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Poor Service
Finally got this book almost 30 days after I ordered it!! Received another book 5 days after ordering it from Amazon, what a difference. Will not order from this store again. Book was in poor condition, broken spine and pages falling out, not as described
Published on July 3, 2009 by R. Carter


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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A wonderfully evocative read, May 13, 1999
By A Customer
I do not understand the basis for the Kirkus reviewer's objections. The plot is in no way overly complicated, the language, "casually obscene" as it may be, fits the characters to a tee, and there are some of the most evocative descriptions that I have ever read. As an example, the description of Miss. Porterfield and the music box on pages 94 and 95 of the book left me in tears. I have known people like her. I also chortled out loud over the description of the blind owl that DuPre adopts. It still hunts and the descriptions of its successful hunts are both very funny and very true to nature.

I have just finished the book and I would like to say that it is the best of his works, and I have read them all. I loved it.

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good Bowen. Not the best, but good., April 27, 2000
By 
BJ Little (Charlottte, NC) - See all my reviews
Gabriel Du Pré is definitely one of my favorite characters in fiction...as is Bart Fascelli. Anyone familiar with Bowen's writing will be right at home with Long Son. Readers looking for an introduction to Bowen would be better off starting with Notches or Wolf, No Wolf.

The story is, as usual, wandering. Readers who like to try and solve the mystery beforehand will be tested not by the complexity of the mystery but by the diversity of its elements. In the end, it's good Bowen, if not his best Du Pré work. The stories of the Métis are, as usual, well worth the read in and of themselves.

Regarding comments by Kirkus and other reviewers, a couple of items. First, the dialect is authentic, if only to a specific population of Montanans. Just because you don't recognize it doesn't make it nonexistent. Also, Montana does have a daytime speed limit. So I'm not sure where that criticism comes from.

Kirkus objects to the "wandering plot" and "casually obscene" conversation. I don't find that the plot wanders any more than Bowen's normal wont, and my daily conversations are no more "casually obscene" than Du Pré's. Maybe it's just where I'm from.

Good writer, good read. Money well spent.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Very good, July 19, 1999
By A Customer
I have read and enjoyed all of Peter Bowen's novels. LONG SON is enjoyable for its unique writing style, the colorful language, the Montana setting, and the very likable characters.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The evil that men do, October 10, 2001
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This review is from: Long Son (Paperback)
Sometimes a family can live like an unhealed sore in the body of a community, threatening to infect the innocent, generation after generation. In the case of the Messmer family, evil skipped a generation then returned full force to destroy what remained of the good.

This sixth Gabriel Du Pré mystery begins at an auction on the Messmer family ranch, about forty miles west of Toussaint. The current owners died in a road accident and the one remaining son is selling almost all of the moveable property. The FBI wants Du Pré to keep an eye on the ranch and the surviving son, but he resists the request of Harvey Wallace, aka Harvey Weasel Fat, Blackfoot and FBI agent:

"'I am old, tired, want to drink, sleep, play a little music,' said Du Pré. `You call, I get no sleep, drink too much, don't play music, maybe get shot at, something. Maybe I hang up, you call back I am gone, no one knows where.'"

Du Pré doesn't disappear but his friend, the Shaman Benetsee does (at least, temporarily). Something evil is afoot on the Messmer ranch, something so dangerous that Du Pré's long-time mistress, Madelaine decides to pay a visit to her Turtle Mountain kin. Du Pré, who is on the villains' hit list bunks up with his friends Bart and Booger Tom.

My problem with this Du Pré mystery is that "Long Son"s plot loses needed focus about half way through. The villains become more generic, as does their evil-doing. Du Pré puts his tracking skills to work at the ranch, and later at Benetsee's cabin, but his heart isn't really in the search---especially when it becomes clear that one of the villains has saved Du Pré's life.

Even as the plot tangles in on itself, the author, Peter Bowen moves from strength to strength in allowing his readers to experience the haunting, intensely familial, whisky-soaked lives of his Métis characters. `The Song of Genevette' is an old Métis ballad whose verses Du Pré must complete in order to find the murderer. It also leads him into the heart of the evil that seeped down through generations of Messmers, and caused their ultimate doom.

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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Song, a long time gone, comes here.", March 12, 2006
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This review is from: Long Son (Paperback)
The history of ranching around northern Montana towns like Toussaint is violent, frequently illegal, and, often, a desperate struggle to survive. The Messmer family has had more than their share of badness and bad luck. The current heir, Larry Messmer, has decided t sell of the ranch and its trappings wholesale, with a great deal of disregard for the community around him. He is a singularily unpleasant man, and it surprises Gabriel Du Pré not one but when Larry turns up dead.

This isn't the type of case Gabriel relishes investigating. Messmer had no redeeming qualities and sudden violent death is an old family habit. But it quickly becomes apparent that more is going on than the demise of a ranch. But one group of people suspect Du Pré of the murder, so he has little choice. Now the possibilities cover everything from money laundering to revenge for the crimes of a previous generation.

All of this with Gabriel in the middle - shot at, controlled by his women, and hassled by Benetsee, a shaman who seems to remember everything at his own convenience. Once again, Bowen pits a contemporary story against the old legends and customs of the Metís. They are the Indians of the northern borders here since before the French and The English, created out of a blend of the tribes around them. Some would deny them a heritage, but Bowen quickly makes it clear that this is a rich and talented people.

One can't help but wish that the Montana of Peter Bowen really existed in all its unspoiled and unexpected splendor. Peopled by modern warriors and musicians, as well as folks to corrupt they could curdle milk. Not a world I would be likely to survive in, but one whose freshness is a perpetual seduction.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Mean damn country. I love it., June 24, 2007
"I hate it when them places go," said Madeline. "All the stories are gone, too." Peter Bowen does a masterful keeping the stories from going. Du Pre, his beautiful lover Madeline, family and friends Metis, descendents of French voyageurs and their Indian wives, in the mean damn Montana Du Pre loves. This one is of retribution, of old families, of honor, of Du Pre's fiddle and the old songs, of a youngster wanting Du Pre to extend to her the torch of musical raconteur, of FBI agents stuffy and zany.

Find a youngster and start him/her on this for a little-known era of history, of local color, of excellent writing about a beloved subject. The child will bless you for it.

And aren't books for sharing as well as loving? You were born to make the world a better place. Here's one way to do it.
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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Poor Service, July 3, 2009
This review is from: Long Son (Paperback)
Finally got this book almost 30 days after I ordered it!! Received another book 5 days after ordering it from Amazon, what a difference. Will not order from this store again. Book was in poor condition, broken spine and pages falling out, not as described
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1 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Difficult to read because of heavy dialect., June 13, 1999
By A Customer
Trying to decipher the heavy dialect is so difficult, that whatever story line that does exist, is lost. I've been to Montana and I've never heard that kind speech before. The authors credibility futher suffers because the main character is repeatedly stopped for speeding. It is not an uncommon fact that Montana has no speed limit.
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Long Son
Long Son by Peter Bowen (Paperback - April 11, 2000)
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