Burn

Nevada Barr

Sound recording - 2010

"Anna Pigeon, a Ranger with the National Park Service...decides to go stay with an old friend from the Park Service, Geneva, who works as a singer at the New Orleans Jazz National Historic Park...it will take all of Anna's skills learned in the untamed outdoors to navigate the urban jungle in which she finds herself..." --inside cover of book.

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Subjects
Published
Grand Haven, Mich. : Brilliance Audio p2010.
Language
English
Main Author
Nevada Barr (-)
Other Authors
Joyce Bean (-)
Edition
Library ed
Item Description
Unabridged recording of the book published in 2010.
Physical Description
10 compact discs (12 hr., 9 min.) : digital ; 4 3/4 in
ISBN
9781441816023
Contents unavailable.
Review by New York Times Review

Anna Pigeon, the stalwart National Park Service ranger in Nevada Barr's rugged wilderness novels, has been feeling her age lately (she was "coming up on 50" six years ago in "High Country"), and she's giving serious thought to a job change. BURN (Minotaur, $25.99) might be considered a step in that direction, since it takes place mostly in the French Quarter of New Orleans and restricts its animal studies to acts of cruelty committed by bipeds who consider themselves human. This uncharacteristically urban novel may not present Anna with any endangered species to protect or environmental threats to ward off, but it does give her a chance to prove that her outdoor skills are adaptable to city streets. The harrowing plot, which concerns the organized sex traffic in young children, also provides Barr with an opportunity to sharpen her characters. Although she travels the pedestrian tourist route in New Orleans and makes little effort to capture the rhythms and inflections of regional speech, Barr doesn't judge the locals by the colorful personalities they wear like carnival masks. The bartenders, strippers, street musicians and voodoo-shop proprietors Anna meets during her search for a young punk she suspects of being a pedophile are well observed and closely analyzed. And her portrayal of Clare Sullivan, wanted on four counts of murder for killing her husband, their two children and his mistress and burning down the family home in Seattle, is as complex as it is sympathetic. By the time Clare and Anna join forces to infiltrate a brothel that trades in children, Barr is writing with the kind of ferocity she usually saves for her backcountry adventures. Although finding work in a city can be tricky for someone like Anna, who admits that violence to animals saddens her "on a level violence to humans did not " Barr slides past the problem by depicting children, in their innocence, as a higher form of animal, And while she can't knock a few years off Anna's age, she gives her the right attitude about aging. Being old is a point of pride, Anna tells herself, because "I am old and mean and on the side of the angels." Colin Cotterill makes it very clear that "there was nothing inherently funny about the People's Democratic Republic of Laos in the 1970s," and offers plenty of evidence in LOVE SONGS FROM A SHALLOW GRAVE (Soho, $25). But Dr. Siri Paiboun, the nation's official (and only) coroner, is determined to see the humor in his diminished life, finding it bubbling up unexpectedly when he goes to the movies to see a piece of Chinese propaganda called "The Train From the Xiang Wu Irrigation Plant" or when he reflects on the giant billboards urging everyone to breed pigs. Just sitting in the rain at a tobacco and alcohol stall, swapping snide comments with a friend on past and present regimes, is an occasion for mirth. To further engage his quick mind, Siri is sometimes given a puzzle to solve, like the murders of three young women, each killed by a thrust through the heart from an épée, a weapon that 99.9 percent of the Laotian population has never heard of. It's also standard procedure in this series for Cotterill to step back from the case at hand and dispatch Siri on a field trip to some other Communist garden spot in Southeast Asia. This time, he's sent on a diplomatic mission to Cambodia that yields rich evidence of crimes committed by the Khmer Rouge in Phnom Penh. And no, it's not the least bit funny. As any well-read child knows, German folk tales are scarier than their sanitized English versions, a quality shrewdly acknowledged by Helen Grant in ber first novel, THE VANISHING OF KATHARINA LINDEN (Delacorte, $24). Set in the small German town of Bad Münstereifel during a cold, dreary winter when little girls seem to be disappearing left and right, this dark story gains immeasurably from Grant's choice of narrator: Pia Kolvenbach, who is socially ostracized (shunned as "the Potentially Explosive Schoolgirl") after her grandmother dies in a bizarre accident. Feeling even more isolated when her English mother and German father begin quarreling, Pia finds companionship with "StinkStefan," "the most unpopular boy in the class," and Herr Schiller, a kindly old gent who spins terrifying but oddly comforting horror stories. Although thin on plot, the novel has nice atmosphere and takes a tender view of lonely children trying to make sense of a grown-up world. Life is just one crazy chore after another for an obsessive-compulsive wreck like Milo Slade. A sweet-tempered nurse whose specialty is caring for homebound geriatrics, he's the hero of Matthew Dicks's offbeat novel, UNEXPECTEDLY, MILO (Broadway, paper, $14.99). When Milo isn't able to make it to a bowling alley where he can bowl a strike or to a karaoke bar to sing "99 Luftballons" in German, he'll dip into his emergency stash of grape jelly jars and get some fast relief by popping their pressure caps. But keeping his increasingly irrational needs a secret from his wife has put such a strain on their marriage that Milo is currently living on his own. The chance discovery of a video camera and a set of confessional tapes made by a woman who has long held herself responsible for the disappearance and probable death of a childhood friend inspires Milo to put his O.C.D. to better use by tracking down the lost friend. The methodical ways he has adopted in pursuit of his weird impulses make Milo a good detective. And if he should find a bit of happiness on his quixotic quest, doesn't the poor guy have it coming? In her latest mystery, Nevada Barr relocates Anna Pigeon, her Park Service heroine, to the streets of New Orleans.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [August 15, 2010]
Review by Booklist Review

In her new novel, the wildly popular Barr takes her crime-solver, park ranger Anna Pigeon, out of her element. Previous installments in the series have found Anna moving from one national park to another, solving the crimes that seem to follow her from place to place, but this time she is in New Orleans, staying with a friend, when, believe it or not, somebody tries to put a hex on her. Anna soon suspects that her friend's tenant, an abundantly off-putting fellow named Jordan, might have something to do with it but why? This is not the first time the author has taken Anna out of her usual rustic settings (1999's Liberty Falling, for instance, is set in New York), but regular readers need not worry: Barr isn't merely rehashing big-city themes she's tackled before. There's a reason why this story needs to be set in the Big Easy, and Barr develops the narrative carefully, never letting the eerie black-magic elements overshadow her solid and suspenseful plotting. A definite winner.--Pitt, David Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Barr's outstanding 16th Anna Pigeon novel (after Borderline) takes the National Park Service ranger to the urban wilderness of post-Katrina New Orleans, where the Jazz National Heritage Park preserves the Big Easy's music. Anna comes to believe that a creepy neighbor, Jordan, one of the "gutter punks" who roam the city, is a pedophile. But Jordan turns out to have another side, and his link with Clare Sullivan, a Seattle actress whose family was murdered in a fire Clare is suspected of setting, is a linchpin of Barr's skillful plot. Anna vividly maneuvers the luridÅcity jungle, from a Bourbon Street strip joint, where the women have formed a family, to a brothel specializing in children. Anna also learns that appearances can deceive even the most insightful of rangers. Anna's complex personality continues to elevate the series, and the ranger's sojourn to New Orleans further energizes this always reliable series. 150,000 first printing. (Aug.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Our favorite park ranger is back. On administrative leave after her adventures in Texas's Big Bend National Park (Borderline), Anna Pigeon visits a friend who works at the New Orleans Jazz National Historical Park. Soon Anna is involved with a mysterious character named Jordan who is not what he appears to be. Their hunt for two missing children leads them into the seedy underworld of sex trafficking and corrupt politicians. As always, Anna is in the thick of things, but her years of law enforcement training and work in the great outdoor parks do not fully prepare her for the wilderness of the urban scene and its inhabitants. Nonetheless, Anna prevails. Unlike in other Barr novels, the park plays a very minor role, but the excitement reigns with a multilayered story, nonstop action, and attention-grabbing characters. VERDICT Making her Minotaur debut, Barr has written another hit. Her fans will devour this. [Seee Prepub Mystery, LJ 4/1/10; 150,000-copy first printing; library marketing campaign.]-Patricia Ann Owens, Illinois Eastern Community Colls., Mt. Carmel, IL (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

National Park Service Ranger Anna Pigeon works her 16th case in the most unparklike setting imaginable.Minutes after Seattle actress Clare Sullivan awakens to find her house emptyno dog, no husband, no daughtersthe building erupts in a flaming explosion. In the aftermath of the destruction, there's even worse news: One of the officers who responded to Clare's 911 call finds the charred bodies of her two girls, Dana and Victoria, dead in their beds, right where Clare had reported they weren't. Driven equally by a single clue, an overheard fragment of a cell-phone call about the "Bourbon Street nursery," and the certainty that the police will arrest her for the murders of her family members, Clare goes AWOL, hoping against hope to find Dana and Vee alive. Meanwhile, in alternating chapters, Anna Pigeon (Hard Truth, 2005, etc.), who has been forced to take a leave of absence from her job on account of her Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, spends the time visiting her friend Geneva Akers, a blind blues singer who performs at New Orleans' Jazz National Historical Park, only a stone's throw from Bourbon Street. It's only a matter of time before Anna's story intersects with Clare's, and the moment of collision halfway through is the most successful surprise here. The sequel is all heartrending accounts of kidnapped and abused children, luridly detailed adventures among the Big Easy's demimondaine, and a climactic assault on a pedophile brothelsturdy stuff, every bit of it, but nothing that plays to Barr's unmatched gift for linking Anna's inner turmoil to the great outdoors.An intense but conventional actioner whose two heroines aren't nearly as compelling as Anna's solo turns.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

ONE Shit, Blackie, this one's dead, too. What're we gonna do?" The speaker, scarcely more than a boy--the lines cruelty would carve deep into his face not yet showing more than petulance--looked with disgust into an aluminum cargo box half the size of a semitrailer. His nose, high bridged and straight, the only feature of his face that suggested an ancestry not devoted to the baser things, wrinkled at the stink, a stink not from the bodies, or from the way they had died, but from the way they had lived for nineteen days. "A jewel?" "Maybe more'n one." "We get rid of 'em." Drops of water on the younger man's thick black hair glittered in the harbor lights like a cheap sequined hairnet. As his head pushed into the shadow of the shipping box, Blackie, fifty last birthday and made of hard muscles and hard times, turned away. For a second it had looked as if the head vanished and left the body standing stooped over by itself. Blackie didn't like magic. Didn't like things that vanished or shifted or weren't what they seemed to be; things that couldn't be relied upon. "Dougie, get your goddam head out of the box," he snapped. "What're you doing? Sniffing 'em? Jesus." Unoffended, Dougie did as he was told. "What're we going to do?" he asked again, sounding plaintive. Absurd burbling notes of "Baa Baa Black Sheep" swam through the moisture-laden air. Blackie tensed, his eyes seeking and sharp with the keenness of the hunter--or the hunted. He wished the night were darker. Seattle's interminable drizzle caught the light from the quay and the street above the docks, giving everything a shadowless glow, robbing the place of depth, reality. "It's your cell phone," Dougie said helpfully. "Fuck." Blackie fumbled the phone out of his jacket pocket and pawed it open, his blunt fingers clumsy as hooves on the tiny plastic cover. "Yeah? Oh, hi, sweetie-pie." A vicious glare, at odds with the sugary voice, abraded the smirk from Dougie's face. "No, Laura, Daddy didn't forget. I thought you got to stay up later's all. Okay. Ready? Nighty night, sleep tight, and don't let the bed bugs bite." As he closed the phone, Dougie began his lament. "What're we gonna--" It was cut off by another few bars of the children's nursery song. Blackie's daughter liked to program the ring on his cell phone. He flipped it open again. "Sweetie . . ." he began, then trailed off. His flesh tightened over wide cheek and brow bones, drawing the rigid lines of a man in pain--or in thrall to someone who enjoyed the dark arts. "Yeah," he said. And "Yeah." And "Clear." Putting the phone back in his pocket, he jerked his chin toward the freight container. "Throw 'em in the back of the van. We got another job." Dougie padded happily into the reeking darkness of the metal coffin. He knew Blackie's look, the freaky frozen look. The other job would be better. It was way more fun when they weren't already dead. TWO Old Man River. What a crock, Anna thought as she sat on a bench on the levee, the April sun already powerful enough to warm the faux wood slats beneath her back and thighs. The Mississippi was so unquestionably female, the great mother, a blowsy, fecund, fertile juggernaut that nurtured and destroyed with the same sublime indifference. Rivers were paltry things where Anna had grown up, fierce only when they flash-flooded. Compared to the Mississippi their occasional rampages seemed merely the peevish snits of adolescence. Half blind from the hypnotic sparkle of sun on ruffled water, she squinted at her watch. Geneva was about to go to work. Grunting mildly because there was no one close enough to hear, Anna shoved herself up from the bench and started back toward the New Orleans Jazz National Historical Park on North Peters, a block from Café Du Monde and Jackson Square. Young persons of the sort she seldom ran across in the parks had laid claim to a swath of the river walk. Six males, three females, four dogs, one puppy, and nine bicycles created a barrier that could either be detoured around or run as a gauntlet. Hostile glares from thirteen pairs of eyes--the puppy looked friendly enough--suggested Anna choose the detour. Sheer orneriness suggested she take the puppy up on his tail-wagging invitation and plow through the pack. The alpha male, tall with hair pulled into a tail of natural dreadlocks, the kind created by aggressively bad hygiene and not kinky hair or salon manipulations, and a beard Charlie Manson might have sported before prison barbers took over his personal grooming, could have been close to thirty. The youngest was the girl holding the puppy. Anna put her at no more than thirteen or fourteen. Age was hard to guess. Male and female alike wore only blacks and browns. Not a speck of color alleviated the drab of their thrift store clothing. Decorations were a study in sartorial nihilism: slashes, iron pins, rag-over-rag T-shirts with swastikas inked on. Piercing and cutting and tattooing moved seamlessly from fabric to flesh. Nothing was symmetrical, soft, or suggestive of kindness. Dirt, soot, sweat, and various effluvia dulled cloth, hair, and skin. Something more immutable dulled the eyes. If life were to be found in T. S. Eliot's waste land, Anna believed it would be in the discovery of roving bands like this one; parentless, homeless, hopeless children, more like the child-soldiers of Rwanda--or little girls pressed into sexual slavery in World War II Japanese prison camps--than children from middle-and upper-class American families who chose to reject the plenty for the ride. Geneva--Anna was staying in the apartment behind her house on Ursulines in the Quarter--called them "gutter punks." They were purported to call themselves "travelers" because they jumped trains, living the nomadic life once followed by hobos. Just how dangerous they were, Anna hadn't a clue, but it was clear they wanted to inspire fear in civilians. Even without the stink and the rags and the self-mutilation, that alone would have earned them a wide berth as far as she was concerned. These kids were not her brand of criminal. She wasn't well versed in their migration patterns, did not know their natural habitat, what they preyed upon or what preyed upon them--but people who valued fear and enjoyed pain were scary. Healthy animals, bunnies and foxes and cougars and grizzlies, ran from what frightened them and avoided pain at all costs. When they stopped behaving this way it was because they were sick, rabid. Anna felt it was the same for people, except one wasn't allowed to put them out of their misery. Avoiding eye contact, she cut across the grass in the direction of the flood wall and the Jazz Historical Park. As she reached the tracks between the levee and the city where the Julia Street trolley ran, she heard a piercing whistle, the kind that can only be produced by sticking one's fingers in one's mouth, the kind that leaves grooves in the gray matter of anyone in a hundred-foot radius. Stopping, she shaded her eyes and looked up the grassy slope she'd just descended. A gutter punk, a man in his late twenties with a double-pierced eyebrow and a crown of thorns tattooed across his forehead, was yelling and waving his arms at a small black dog racing down the levee after a flashily dressed white man who looked more Bronx chic than New Orleans cool. Anna recognized the black terrier as one of the pack milling around on the river walk. The punk whistled again, and the mutt, as shaggy as his owner, hesitated and looked back. His feathery tail waved once; then he sat down no more than a yard from Anna, made a perfect O of his lips, pointed his chin at the sky, and howled a tiny wolf-puppy howl so perfect and unscary that Anna laughed. Communication completed--at least as far as the dog was concerned--the little guy upended and ran off after the man he'd been following. The punk on the levee howled then, and the hairs on the back of Anna's neck stirred in the heat. The punk's howl was all wolf, old and crying-sad as if the fuzzy-rumped pooch disappearing through the gate in the flood wall was absconding with all the love and light in the world. Punk or not, Anna couldn't stand the anguish. She ran to catch an undoubtedly filthy and probably flea-ridden mutt. The flood wall opened into a wide alley paved in brick and peopled by three-quarter life-sized bronze sculptures: a butcher, a woman sitting on a park bench--citizens from a previous century sentenced to eternity in the town that had passed them by. Anna skirted a fountain squirting three pathetically weak streams of water into the air and stopped in front of the Dutch Alley art gallery. The doors were open and could have swallowed a man and dog before she'd arrived. Shops in New Orleans seldom closed their doors, leaving them wide summer and winter in hopes the increase in tourist traffic would off set the energy bills. Man and dog could have stepped into any one of these invitations. New Orleans was dog friendly; animals in stores and bars were commonplace. "Hah!" Anna said as she caught the last few inches of a tail disappearing into an archway farther down the alley. "Gotcha." She trotted after the dog. From behind she could hear the clatter of heavy boots on brick. The punk was rounding the fountain. He wasn't as tall as he'd looked standing atop the levee and was thin to the point of starvation. Though the distance from where his clan usurped the public walkway to where Anna stood was less than a hundred yards, he was breathing heavily and had one hand pressed hard into his side. "This way," Anna called and ran into the shade of the arch. To one side was another art gallery, to the other the public toilets. The flashy dresser might have ducked into the john, but Anna had no intention of checking the men's room. Seeing men urinating against trees, though a perfectly natural transaction, was bad enough. She had no desire to witness the phenomenon as an indoor sport. She ran through to North Peters Street. A flash of greasy lemon caught her eye. The dog whisperer's sport coat and, faithful as a shadow, the little feather-tailed dog had crossed North Peters and were halfway down Dumaine. The punk gasped up beside her in a gust reeking of old cigarettes and older urine as yellow jacket and pup turned into a slit between two brick buildings. The light had turned and traffic was flowing, but Anna figured she could make it across the four lanes without getting squashed. Stepping off the curb, she heard the punk yell, "Wait!" but she was already committed. A horse-drawn carriage slowed cars coming from the French Market. Anna darted between two frustrated SUVs and jumped onto the sidewalk, where, if they did hit her, they'd be poaching. None of the drivers even bothered to flip her off. The Big Easy might have the highest per capita murder rate in the country, but the citizens were nice folks for all of that. Sprinting through lackadaisical tourists like Drew Brees through linebackers, Anna zigged down Dumaine and into the narrow alley where the punk's dog had gone. Alleys in New Orleans were unlike alleys in other American cities. Rather than being skinny runs given over to garbage cans and used condoms, many were transformed into impossibly slender gardens, with plant hangers drilled into the brick walks, ivy and creeping fig cloaking age and decay, and bright scraps of found art alleviating the gloom. "Stop!" somebody yelled, but she paid no attention. She had spotted the dog. Partway down the verdant little urban canyon, tail up, it trotted on the heels of the stranger. "Excuse me!" she called. The man turned back and stared at her for a second longer than seemed necessary. "You talkin' to me?" Robert De Niro, Taxi Driver. The guy was dead on, and Anna laughed. He squinted and looked suddenly dangerous. He hadn't been mimicking De Niro intentionally, Anna guessed. That or he believed he was De Niro. "That your dog?" Anna asked. The man looked down at the black terrier, noticing it for the first time. "He following me?" "Since the levee," Anna told him. "Get the fuck away from me," the guy shouted and kicked the little animal so viciously Anna screamed in pain along with it. Fury swept over her till the fern-feathered walls, the brick path, and even the whimpering dog disappeared. All that remained at the end of her tunnel vision was the oily man in the yellow sport coat and the need to rip him into teensy weensy pieces. Without thought, she started for him. What she would have done had she reached him, she never found out. Into her truncated view flashed silver, a knife, an edged weapon. The glint of hard steel kindly brought Anna back to her right mind. Stopping abruptly, she knelt and picked up the dog, pretending that had been her goal all along. "Your filthy cur follows me again, I kill it. You got that?" "I got it," Anna said and, the dog cradled in her arms, took a step back, then another. The knife wielder didn't take his eyes off her, but she had the oddest sensation she was vanishing. The moment she ceased to be a threat, she ceased to exist for him. The old "Dog's Philosophy of Life" seemed to apply to this creature: If he couldn't screw it, eat it, or piss on it, the hell with it. Whistling under his breath--"Some Enchanted Evening," it sounded like--he folded the knife closed and continued down the alley. Hugging the dog, Anna watched until he turned a corner and was gone from sight. Labored breathing dragged her attention back toward the Dumaine Street entrance. The punk, still clutching his side and moving with a slight dragging of the left foot as if he'd been born clubfooted and it had never been corrected, half fell in from the street and leaned heavily against the wall. Anna turned on her heroine's smile and waited for the accolades. She deserved at least that for facing down an armed man to save a gutter punk's dog. "Where is he?" the punk screamed as he lurched toward her between the mossy walls. "You bitch, you goddamn bitch." Spittle flew from his mouth as he turned on Anna and cursed her. The crown of thorns was tight across his brow, and his eyes were wild, whites showing around the irises, pupils dilated and bottomless. Above his lip a pencil-thin mustache contorted into Etch A Sketch angles, and the thumb-sized tuft of beard beneath his lower lip jutted out like the spine of a horned lizard. "Stop, goddammit! Wait, goddammit," he screamed, but the yellow jacket was long gone. Arms outstretched like a B-movie zombie's, he lunged. Anna flattened herself and the dog against the brick and aimed a swift kick at his knee. He went down like a puppet whose strings had been cut and began to cry, wailing like a child. Various courses of action skittered through Anna's mind. She could kneel and try to comfort this tortured soul. She could pull out her cell phone and call 911. Yell for help. Try to find the knife man. In the end all she did was set the dog down by its master and walk away. Since she was on administrative leave for mental instability--or something very like--the dog would have as good a shot at doing the right thing as she would. Probably better. Leaving the alley, she hazarded a backward glance. The punk had managed to pull himself into a sitting position. He was hugging the dog. The dog was licking his face. For a moment Anna watched them. There was something about the dog that was off, niggling at the edges of her mind. Breathing in the cooking smells on the street, the whiff of exhaust, the hints of horse manure, it came to her. The little terrier was a mess--it looked as if its hair had been chewed off in a dogfight rather than clipped by a sane groomer--but it was silky soft, shampooed, brushed, and smelled faintly of lilacs.   Excerpted from Burn by Nevada Barr. Copyright  2010 by Nevada Barr. Published in 2010 by Minotaur Books. All rights reserved. This work is protected under copyright laws and reproduction is strictly prohibited. Permission to reproduce the material in any manner or medium must be secured from the Publisher. Excerpted from Burn by Nevada Barr All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.