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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Repeat after me: "Hap and Leonard kick [...]
The author I've read the most is Stephen King at 17 books to date. Joe R. Lansdale is second with 10. Those numbers might not be impressive, but I try to read a little from a lot of different authors. Anyway, books like SAVAGE SEASON - or anything with Hap and Leonard - are why I like Lansdale's writing so much.

For those of you that don't know, SAVAGE SEASON is the...

Published on October 28, 2001 by Church of The Flaming Sword

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars I hate the word "thriller" but....
This was the second of Lansdale's novels I'd read, and it's a great intro to Hap and Leonard (these guys appear in several novels of his at this point).

The characters are not only very well-rounded and fully realized, but I felt like they were old friends of mine by the time the book was done.

More so, the writing style is just so much fun; the...
Published on February 8, 2007 by K


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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Repeat after me: "Hap and Leonard kick [...], October 28, 2001
This review is from: Savage Season (Paperback)
The author I've read the most is Stephen King at 17 books to date. Joe R. Lansdale is second with 10. Those numbers might not be impressive, but I try to read a little from a lot of different authors. Anyway, books like SAVAGE SEASON - or anything with Hap and Leonard - are why I like Lansdale's writing so much.

For those of you that don't know, SAVAGE SEASON is the novel that introduces Hap Collins, a straight white liberal ex-con, and Leonard Pine, a humorously cocky black homosexual Vietnam veteran. Hap and Leonard catch news that a hundred grand is deep down in an East Texas river. Joining the hunt are three Sixties radicals. One of these radicals is Hap's ex-wife Trudy. Hap and Leonard are soon doublecrossed by the radicals, who still haven't given up their dreams of revolution. The radicals, along with Hap and Leonard, are betrayed by one of their own to a far worse criminal.

This novel like a lot of Lansdale's work is violent, raunchy, funny, and not written to appease political correctness factions. Though the later Hap and Leonard novels like BAD CHILI and MUCHO MOJO are a bit more colorful, SAVAGE SEASON is the best place to start for the uninitiated.

LONG LIVE HAP AND LEONARD!!!

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Warmly recommended, February 8, 2003
This review is from: Savage Season (Paperback)
The first in an amazing series involving Hap Collins and Leonard Pine, two most unlikely heroes (though heroes they are). The author performs a powerful magic that transforms a tale with a violent twist about characters that are theoretically undesireable into something unique and hard to put down or forget. Furthermore, should you never laugh out loud when reading this and don't feel moved to buy one of the other Hap & Leonard books I'll be surprised. The story, set in East Texas, is about a treasure hunt, Hap's old girl and much more. Caveat: this is perhaps the weakest of the series - it still rates 5 stars.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars THE PERFECT INTRODUCTION TO A FANTASTIC SERIES!!!, September 17, 2001
By 
Wayne C. Rogers (Las Vegas, Nevada United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Savage Season (Paperback)
SAVAGE SEASON by Joe R. Lansdale is the first novel in the "Hap Collins/Leonard Pine" series and clearly demonstrates the path to be taken by these utterly outrageous, yet definably noble characters. As the novel starts out, Hap and Leonard are doing okay. They have steady jobs in the rose fields and are taking a day off to shoot some skeet in the field behind Hap's house. Yep, everything is going pretty good until trouble walks around the corner of the house in the form of Trudy (Hap's ex-wife). Now, I don't know if Mr. Lansdale ever met my ex-girlfriend, but his description of Trudy fits her like a tight pair of spandex pants. Every time Trudy steps back into Hap's life and then leaves him again, it takes several months for him to recover. Needless to say, Leonard hates this lady for the way she treats his best friend. Anyway, Trudy has what appears to be a sweet deal for her loving ex-husband. It seems that one of her other ex-husbands, Howard, was in jail with a man who'd helped to rob a bank of one million dollars. All of the bank robber's cohorts were killed during or after the crime, and he almost bought the farm himself when he crashed his getaway boat into a submerged tree stump somewhere along the Sabine River. The money was never recovered, and the bank robber got life in prison. He gave Howard a general location of where he thought the sunken boat might be, hoping that if Howard were able to find the money, he'd share some of it with him to make his stay in prison a little easier. Since Hap knows the Sabine River like the back of his hand (well, maybe not quite that good), Trudy enlists Hap's help in locating the boat, offering him $200,000.00 for his services. Knowing Trudy as well as he does, Hap immediately gets Leonard to join in so that they can watch each other's backs. It isn't long before our East Texan duo find themselves caught in the middle of a betrayal that surprises neither one of them. The only real question is whether or not they will live long enough to see who actually ends up with the money. SAVAGE SEASON, though not as long or rich in detail as the other novels in the series, is still a fun, fast-paced read. The bantering and interaction between Hap and Leonard is what hooks you into this fantastic series. These two characters come alive in ways that other authors should take a look at. There's a lot to be learned here. Also, this novel offers a good deal of background information on both Hap and Leonard. This is stuff I didn't know because I started reading the series from the middle, then worked forward, and finally finished with the first novel, when I should've started with it to begin with. This sounds like something Hap and Leonard would do. Anyway, I enjoyed finding out why Hap had gone to prison as a young adult, how Trudy came into his life (she's referred to in a number of the other books), how he and Leonard met, and Leonard's background as a Vietnam vet. This information filled in a lot of blanks for me. For me, Mr. Lansdale's prose was smoothly written, offering a glimpse of how he would later develop into the author that he is today. All in all, this was an excellent read for me, and I was sorry to have the story end. I can't thank Joe R. Lansdale enough for this fabulous series. I only wish that he could write a "Hap/Leonard" book every year, while also doing his stand-alone novels. I hope that one of the novels in this series will eventually be done as a movie with Bruce Willis and Samuel L. Jackson in the roles of Hap and Leonard. That would be the dessert after a delicious three-course meal!!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A nice literary snack, August 1, 2002
This review is from: Savage Season (Paperback)
At less than 200 pages, it does not overstay its welcome. In fact, this was the perfect length for this story. Hap and his friend Leonard (who we are told in no uncertain terms is a gay black man) are asked by Hap's ex-wife Trudy to help her find the money from a bank robbery committed by someone her current husband knew. That's the main plot that this is based on. From then on, however, everything goes wrong.

There are no gray areas here, everyone is either good or bad, and there are some very bad people here. Some of the scenes are particularly gruesome, but Lansdale's writing carries one through. The characterizations save this one from being common-grade pulp. I would probably pursue Hap and Leonard through other adventures. I will most certainly pick up another of Joe Lansdale's novels.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars lean, mean, never boring......, December 5, 1999
By 
J. Bilby "littlebibs" (Kingston, New Hampshire United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Savage Season (Hardcover)
I don't think I have picked up a Lansdale book I haven't liked, this guy has got to be the most diverse writer and dare I say brilliant. So many stories up his sleeve, always strange but thats my kinda writer. I wish they would make some of these into an X-files like Friday nite series staring these characters Hap and Lenoard with every week a new mystery to unturn. This story was a fast read and right to the point, don't bother trying to analysis Joe's stuff its great fun!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Intense, pageturning suspense., June 14, 1998
This review is from: Savage Season (Paperback)
SAVAGE SEASON is a fast-paced, hard-boiled suspense novel about two hardworking friends, Hap and Leonard, who can't resist the opportunity to make a quick $200,000 a piece. All they have to do is find the money that is supposedly buried somewhere in an icy river where Hap grew up. But nothing comes easy for these two and it isn't long before they're not only dealing with vicious weather but also greedy and psychotic humans.

This is a short little book that packs a punch. It is unflinchingly and sometimes painfully graphic but the characters of Hap and Leonard, who both have a really nasty sense of humor, provide much needed comic relief. I don't want to give too much away here but this book isn't going to become one of my favorites, even though I enjoyed most of it, because of a certain horrendous plot twist towards the end of the story that tore out my heart.

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Book That Lives Up To Its Title, June 7, 1997
By A Customer
This review is from: Savage Season (Paperback)
While one of Lansdale's early novels, this is still one of his best. Hap and Leonard are two of his most believable characters -- maybe not always all that likeable, but that's part of the charm. You'll read this novel in one sitting and turn the pages so quickly they'll almost set themselves on fire. The climactic final scenes will set your heart racing and haunt you for a long time to come
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars I hate the word "thriller" but...., February 8, 2007
This review is from: Savage Season (Paperback)
This was the second of Lansdale's novels I'd read, and it's a great intro to Hap and Leonard (these guys appear in several novels of his at this point).

The characters are not only very well-rounded and fully realized, but I felt like they were old friends of mine by the time the book was done.

More so, the writing style is just so much fun; the man's got these wonderful turns-of-phrase, and, unlike so many books today, it's not "Written for the screen." It's an actual book. There's more than just dialogue on these here pages.

Good stuff. Only 3 stars b/c "Mucho Mojo" and "Two-Bear Mambo" are even better.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The start of something beautiful, March 11, 2005
By 
Ryan Thomas "Magazine Editor" (San Diego, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
There's little to be said of the Hap and Leonard novels other than they are immensely entertaining, witty, and fast paced. Lansdale's voice is at times hilarious, and at times poignant. There are real souls to these characters, and you really care about them.

In this first installment, Hap and Leonard find themselves in the middle of a treasure hunt gone awry. It's a very short novel that can be read in a day if you've got the time. Plot-wise, it's not as good as Rumble Tumble or Mucho Mojo or the others, but it relies heavily on character development, and that is always a good thing.

Like Elmore Leonard, Lansdale's cast of characters are bizzare to the nth degree, yet despite their zaniness, he manages to make them human. This has got to be my favorite Buddy series. Always gets me laughing.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars mellion108 from Michigan, April 2, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Savage Season (Hardcover)
Quick, gritty read: After hearing positive reviews about Joe Landsale, I decided togive this one a try. Landsdale does not dissapoint. His characters arerealistic and say things real people say. His writing is concise and fluid; this is such an easy read that I polished it off in one sitting. I simply had to find out how everything wrapped up! This is not a horror novel in the traditional sense but rather a crime/suspense novel.

The narrator, Hap, and his friend Leonard wind up in a post-60's idealistic crime plot that sinks them deeper and deeper into trouble. Hap says of his ex-wife Trudy, the dame that leads them both astray, "last time she had come around and gone away, I had started on a monumental drunk that embarrassed the winos down at the highway mission." You'd think he'd listen to Leonard who tells him that Trudy is "as fake as pro-wrestling." But then you wouldn't get to read the rest of this roller coaster! This is one that will appeal to fans of a variety of genres. Horror, crime, detective, suspense...SAVAGE has it all along with some bitingly funny dialogue. MUCHO MOJO is the follow-up to SAVAGE. That's my next Lansdale stop.
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Savage Season: A Hap and Leonard Novel (1) (Vintage Crime/Black Lizard)
Savage Season: A Hap and Leonard Novel (1) (Vintage Crime/Black Lizard) by Joe R. Lansdale (Paperback - January 6, 2009)
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