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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Simply outstanding!,
By
This review is from: Pale Horse Coming (Hardcover)
Pale Horse Coming is classic Stephen Hunter -- an epic battle of good versus evil, the limits of human endurance, courage under fire, loyalty, and of course, guns. The story centers around two characters from Hunter's previous works -- Sam Vincent, gentleman lawyer, and Earl Swagger, WWII veteran and medal of honor winner. On behalf of a client, Vincent journeys deep into the wilderness of Mississippi to check on the status of a prisoner at Thebes State Prison - the location where the worst of the worst "colored" offenders are sent. Suspecting that he is walking into a dangerous situation, Vincent obtains the word of Swagger that he will come looking for Vincent if he does not return from Mississippi in a pre-specified duration. Of course, Vincent walks into something that is beyond even his worst nightmares, thus engaging Swagger in his pledge to follow Vincent. The story moves well, has lots of action, suspense, and frequent plot twists, while giving the author a forceful understanding of race relations in the deep South during the 1950's. If you have liked Hunter's previous works, you will enjoy this as well. It is a compelling page turner.
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Earl Swagger returns,
By
This review is from: Pale Horse Coming (Mass Market Paperback)
Stephen Hunter made a name for himself the last decade or so with the Swagger novels. Three involve Bob Lee Swagger, a Marine sniper in Viet Nam who just wants to retire peacefully to his native Arkansas. Pale Horse Coming is the second involving Earl Swagger, Bob Lee's father, a Marine Medal of Honor winner from the Pacific War who has returned to Arkansas to be a State Trooper. In this installment, an old family friend, Sam Vincent, gets himself into more trouble than you'd think a simple country lawyer could, and winds up a prisoner in Thebes, Mississippi, at a prison for Blacks that is so horrific it even has the same sign over the entrance as Auschwitz. Earl breaks Sam out of the prison, but is himself captured in the process. We then follow Earl through the horror of this place in all of its manifestations. Eventually, Earl breaks out, recruits a group of gunmen, and returns to kill the guards and destroy the prison.The beginning of the book is paced reasonably well, but you know something more is going to happen, so you are anticipating what's to come. Earl's incarceration in the prison was interminable for me after a while: I think this is the weak point of the book. Once he escapes, the recruiting of the gunmen, and their return to Thebes, are interesting, with the proviso that suspense isn't an issue here: these guys are so good that the guards and local police don't stand a chance, and are soon running. Only the main bad guy characters provide any challenge at all. I gather that you can sort of recognize some of the gunmen from the last third of the book as pastiches of real individuals: the only one most readers are likely to recognize is a rather obvious Audie Murphy. This is in keeping with Hunter's previous books: Bob Lee Swagger's rival sniper in Viet Nam in Point of Impact is based on a real individual. Given all of that, this is still a fun book. The plot moves right along, and the author has a good time with his characters. You can tell he's enjoying this. There's a whole sequence at the beginning with the Mississippi police deciding that a lawyer from Blue Eye Arkansas is probably sophisticated and a Yankee, and that drew several chuckles from me. I enjoyed this book a great deal, and would recommend it.
10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Hunter's best,
By
This review is from: Pale Horse Coming (Hardcover)
If you've read Hunter before you'll recognize his archetypes: sergeants, bold, strong and taciturn, yakky old southern or western gunfighters, pretty young women, dastardly villains who deserve the whacking they get and how. And that's Hunter: cliches executed with such bravado they transcend their own triteness. In this one, our hero Earl Swagger is on a mission from God: he's encountered a place on earth that should be in hell, a viciously racist southern prison farm for black men, where oppression is the style of the day. And so Earl, surviving but just barely, goes to town: he recruites a magnificent seven or a seven samurai and goes to war.Hunter is both playful and sadistic in this one. His vision of the prison, with its ordeals of torture and oppression, its sense of crushing doom, is quite convincing. At the same time, he's having fun evoking movies (from Kurosawa, Sturges and Peckinpah) and literary sources (from Aeschylus to Faulkner, with Conrad and Freddie Forsythe thrown in for good measure), and part of the fun is catching his allusions. But the end result is extremely poweful narrative magic: you cannot put this sucker down until the end, and if you look, you'll see that it's 5 a.m., you have an 8 a.m. appointment, and you won't care.
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