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Terminal: A Burke Novel (Burke Series)
 
 
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Terminal: A Burke Novel (Burke Series) [Abridged, Audiobook, CD] [Audio CD]

Andrew Vachss (Author), David Joe Wirth (Reader)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (43 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 28, 2008 Burke Series (Book 17)
When the former shot-caller of the country’s most feared white supremacist prison gang contacts Burke, he comes with references…and the promise of a huge score. Terminally ill, the ex-con needs major cash to gamble on the long-shot possibility of a cure that’s available only in Switzerland. The one card he has to play is a small-time degenerate who paid for protection when they were in prison together. That professional bottom-feeder claims he personally buried the body of a thirteen-year-old girl who had been raped, tortured, and finally killed by three rich men more than thirty years ago - and that he’s holding irrefutable proof. But such a complicated extortion scheme needs the hand of a specialist crew, so Burke is offered a piece of the action. He and his outlaw family put together a lethal plan. If they can pull it off, Burke gets the two things he lives for: money and revenge. If they can’t, “terminal” could prove to be more than just one man’s diagnosis.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Vachss's 17th Burke novel (after 2006's Mask Murder) combines gritty realism with an over-the-top depiction of an omniscient spy network. Claude Dremdell, a white supremacist whose sole hope against his terminal illness is a pricy experimental Swiss treatment, ropes Burke into a plot to extort money from three wealthy men who years earlier committed a brutal murder (loosely based on the real-life Martha Moxley case), but were never suspected. Armed with only fragmentary evidence in the form of two checks, Burke turns for help to an Israeli intelligence operation working covertly in the U.S. with superhuman powers of information gathering. Lengthy tirades about the failures of the criminal justice system under the current Bush administration will distract even those who agree with them. In the end, the violent vengeance Burke seeks overshadows the worthy points Vachss makes about the continuing horrific sexual abuse of the young.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Review

"Illuminates both the darkest excesses of criminality and, in counterpoint, the slack-jawed solipsism of the law-abiding."—Time Out Chicago“Vachss's prose is as taut and streetwise as ever, drawing his readers again into an evil underworld that is at once impossible to look away from and horrible to behold."—Associated Press"Burke is the hardest, most twisted man in crime and thriller fiction."—Contra Costa Times “Transcends the crime novel even further. . . . Like a lecture from the smartest raconteur you never want to meet.”—The Seattle Times --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Audio CD
  • Publisher: Brilliance Audio on CD Value Priced; Abridged edition (August 28, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1423340647
  • ISBN-13: 978-1423340645
  • Product Dimensions: 7 x 5.1 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (43 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #7,856,054 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Andrew Vachss has been a federal investigator in sexually transmitted diseases, a social-services caseworker, a labor organizer, and has directed a maximum-security prison for "aggressive-violent" youth. Now a lawyer in private practice, he represents children and youth exclusively. He is the author of numerous novels, including the Burke series, two collections of short stories, and a wide variety of other material including song lyrics, graphic novels, essays, and a "children's book for adults." His books have been translated into twenty languages, and his work has appeared in Parade, Antaeus, Esquire, Playboy, The New York Times, and many other forums. His books have been awarded the Grand Prix de Littérature Policiére, the Falcon Award, Deutschen Krimi Preis, Die Jury des Bochumer Krimi Archivs and the Raymond Chandler Award (per Giurìa a Noir in Festival, Courmayeur, Italy). Andrew Vachss' latest books include Heart Transplant (Dark Horse Books, October 2010), a collaboration with Frank Caruso that attempts to reset the cultural software as it pertains to bullying, and The Weight (Pantheon, November 2010), a crime novel. The dedicated Web site for Vachss and his work is vachss.com.

 

Customer Reviews

43 Reviews
5 star:
 (23)
4 star:
 (4)
3 star:
 (6)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:
 (7)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (43 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best in the Business, September 25, 2007
If you've never picked up a Burke book before, this is the one to start with. Full of action, darkness, and a message buried in the pages that will haunt you long after you finish. Andrew Vachss always calls his books "Trojan Horses" because he wants the public to take a good look at themselves and understand why certain types of evil happens in the world. Vachss has reported on child molestation, Internet child porn, sex slavery in Thailand, and school shootings long before the "media" pretended that they discovered a new phenomenon. Chris Hanson is not a hero; he's a television personality looking for ratings. Andrew Vachss writes "thrillers" to wake people up to the truth. Terminal continues that trend. I don't want to give elements of the plot away. Suffice it to say that this is a one-sitting read, with Hammett-like economy and a poetry all his own. It's no wonder that many of the popular writers today (David Morrell, to name one) sing his praises. To me, if he isn't pissing people off, he's not doing his job. And by pissing off, I mean making the predators of this world angry that he's exposing them for what they are, and angering those "Children of the Secret" who will try to show lawmakers, politicians, and bureaucrats that "behavior is truth." I know that's Mr. Vachss' rallying cry. I hope everyone who sees this will read the book and answer the call.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Terminal!, October 4, 2007
Burke is back: older, perhaps wiser, attempting to avoid being crushed by the accumulation of his losses, at the book's beginning.

The basic plot has already been described accurately enough. Burke is going through the motions, attending to his usual schemes and scams, but gaining no real satisfaction from his successes. He's back in New York and his family is there for him, as always, but Burke seems struck by a sense of impending...not loss, exactly, but perhaps sadness, as he observes the Family Pride at Flower's academic achievements, even as he shares them, remembering the day her parents met, so long ago.

Terry, too, is now a grown man, struggling to accept the idea of commencing with his own life, as he fears his future will bring him further away from his own mother and father, even while understanding that this is what they *want* for him -- a life of his own, outside the shadows.

The Prof has Clarence; the Mole has Michelle; Max has Immaculata, and while Burke loves them all, and rejoices in their closeness with one another, Burke himself is all alone. Thoughts of Belle and Pansy haunt him, as does his knowledge that he's blown his last chance with prosecutor Wolfe, and he finds (to his own surprise) that the events which took place in Vachss' last Burke book, _Mask Market_, have affected him profoundly.

This is the state of mind Burke is in when contacted by Claw, the terminally-ill, high-ranking member of a White Supremacist group with ties to another member of Burke's family-of-choice, Silver, who Burke fans will remember from other novels. Silver vouches for Claw, so Burke agrees to help him with an extortion scheme against three rich men, who've been keeping a secret, the rape and murder of a young girl that happened way back when they were still three rich *boys*.

There is enough detail from former Burke novels to bring new readers at least somewhat up to speed, while not growing tedious for long-time readers. The plot, as always with Vachss, is tightly-woven, intricate, and takes a few surprising turns. Also, as always with Vachss, it serves as a means of conveying deep truths...about family, greed, and the choices people make.

I imagine the reviews I've read which mention Vachss' supposed over-the-top "political commentary" most likely all stem from the PW review's mention of "the Bush administration," because this was not what I saw at *all*. Since book one, Burke has had a habit of reading the papers, listening to the radio, and watching teevee, while commenting on the inanities and insanities of the world. Similarly, Burke has *always* criticized the "criminal justice system" -- it's what made him the man he is! Again, Burke has never had a high opinion of politicians -- any politicians from any political party. I did not find him any more overly focused on the Bush administration than he was on the Clinton administration, during the books in which Bill Clinton was President, for example. In no way did I feel that Burke's (immediately recognizable to those who've read more than one of the Burke novels) usual dismissal of talking-head politicians or Springer-audience-type voters overshadowed the plot or the narrative.

The ending is a real cliff-hanger, but not in a way that I found "cheap," simply in the OMG-I-can't-WAIT-for-the-next-Burke-novel way.

Burke has always been a man with a family, but he seems to be feeling "all alone" recently. The experiences he's undergone over the series would have profound impacts on anyone, and Burke is questioning many of his lifelong assumptions, and wondering about his place, within his own beloved family, and with the larger world as well.

And I cannot wait for the next Burke novel!
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12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Is Andrew Vachss "Over-the-Top?" - Review of Terminal, October 6, 2007
I have to be honest and admit that I understand why Publishers' Weekly describes the work of Andrew Vachss as "over-the-top." Like so many pundits, they are writing from a position of ignorance and wishful thinking. While I have come to expect such ignorance in everyday life, I expect more from those who claim the right to judge the literary merit of America's finest authors. On the other hand, to be honest, there are times when I envy their ignorance, though never for long.

Over the years, as I have read each and every one of his books, I have consistently wished that the work of Andrew Vachss really was more fictional and less real. When he wrote about Internet porn, years before "regular people" were aware of this horrendous and lucrative criminal enterprise, he was called "over-the-top," and accused of a wild and sick imagination. If only those accusations were correct.

I wish I didn't know so much about the evil that (mostly) men do, and I wish that I could join in the ill-informed chorus that accuses Vachss's novels of being "over-the-top." It would be a better world if he were inventing this stuff, but he is not.

Each of Andrew Vachss' novels has required a combination of skill and courage. Because he relies so heavily on unpleasant, unthinkable truth, he is guaranteed to draw fire from bad people who perpetuate these evils, and otherwise good people who simply don't want to believe that they exist. But ignorance is not bliss; ignorance harms children. The telling of hard truths has always been the hallmark of our greatest thinkers, and they are almost always vilified. Later, when the entertainers who bring us our news confirm the unthinkable, too slowly they are believed.

Andrew Vachss, it seems, has long ago decided that when it comes to protecting our children, time is not our friend. Subtle education is not on his agenda, because we don't have time for people to figure this stuff out.

So Terminal, like every Vachss novel that preceded it, hits us in the face with things we'd rather not believe. If his prose is "over-the-top," it is because of the unvarnished accuracy of his observations. These books may be fiction, but the stories they tell are not. When Vachss hits us in the face with truths we'd rather deny, the correct response is not to assault the messenger. Instead, America should say, "Thanks, we needed that," and do something about it.

(For those who choose to do something about it, write to protect.org. You won't be alone.)
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