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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
As touching as Jim Thompson gets, December 23, 1999
This book really surprised me. There's something of a sense of humanity and impotence that Thompson touches on here that is absent from his other work. Don't get me wrong- the novel is devoid of sentimentality. The setting is dated but that really appealled to me. It functions as a work of history to those of us born in the mid-late seventies. It is also a hard-boiled love-story and crime story taking place at a work camp comprised of hoboes laying a gas pipeline in west Texas, just "south of heavan." As a recent college grad I could really identify with the human protagonist, a kid who has a gift, a set of skills, who is being pushed around by others and on the inside. He has a decision to make. And that decision isn't as obvious as everyone is telling him it is. What I love about Jim Thompson is that nothing is black and white. Nothing is one or two diminsional. There are good guys and bad guys. Most of the time its the supposed bad guy, or a terrific sociopath that the reader is forced to identify with. And if a guy is really bad through and through, Thompson gives you a damn good reason why. This isn't my favorite Jim Thompson book. I prefer the classics like After Dark my Sweet, the Getaway, The Killer Inside Me, etc. etc. But South of Heavan definitely belongs in the top ten, maybe even top five in the pantheon.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Raymond Chandler meets The Grapes of Wrath, April 3, 2001
This was my second Thompson book, after 'The Killer Inside Me' ... & after starting with that, which I keep hearing is one of his best, I was afraid I'd be let down ... afraid because I enjoyed 'The Killer ...' tremendously. Happily, my fear was unfounded ... & I was delighted how different 'South of Heaven' is from 'The Killer ...' & how I got not only a fun piece of crime fiction but also something that evoked some of the same feelings as 'The Grapes of Wrath,' if written entirely differently. Thompson does an excellent job portraying the hard lives of the pipeliners without boring the reader. Tommy Burwell is a great character, too. ... I hope Thompson is in the midst of being rediscovered (judging by how many of his books are in print, maybe so) & I know I'm gonna enjoy him as much as Graham Greene (who's my all-time favorite writer), if for entirely different reasons. Greene, who was a wonderful writer, dismissed his own books as mere "entertainments." The same could easily be (wrong-headedly) said of the two Thompson books I've read thus far ... but oh man are they ever entertaining.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Pipelaying in West Texas, December 23, 2007
The time is the 1920s. Tommy Burwell has been moving about the country working on jobs ranging from picking apples to laying pipe. He spends his money as fast as he earns it. Now he has heard about a pipelaying job in West Texas, and drifts into the area, waiting for the company to start hiring. The work is hard and dangerous, and working men are considered expendable. Most have no local connections. If they die, they will be buried on the job site - the pipeline is in a convenient ditch. If a man is injured or becomes ill, tough luck.
Tommy has a side arrangement with his friend Four Trey to deal blackjack on payday nights. Payrolls are in cash. The workers live from payday to payday, blowing their money on liquor, cards, and women. Piles of cash draw predators, and some have thoughts for acquiring the cash.
Along the way, Tommy experiences some Texas style justice. He is charged with a crime, but deals can be made. He is told by the sheriff which lawyer he should hire. If convicted, a pardon may be available for a price, even if convicted of murder.
Tommy finds himself caught between various people, the pipeline boss, the law, his friend Four Trey, a woman he has met, and some unsavory characters in the construction camp. The company's prupose is to build the pipeline (there are penalties for being late, and bonuses for being early) - nothing can stand in their way. Everyone has their own motivations. You learn a lot about laying pipe.
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