The Do-Right
1970年代テキサスを舞台に、服役を終えた女性デルファと私立探偵トムが事件に向き合う犯罪小説。乾いたユーモアと傷を抱えた人物造形が物語を支える。
Work Information
A hardboiled mystery driven by damaged people, dry wit, and a sharply drawn Texas setting.
WorldCat と販売情報で ISBN-13 とページ数を確認し、ISBN-10 と ASIN を補完した。
Review Summaries
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Readers note the craft of the prose and structure, with the handling of its subject and lingering aftertaste leaving a strong impression.
Book Information
- Publisher
- Cinco Puntos Press
- Published
- 2015-10-27
- Pages
- 306 pages
- Language
- 英語
- Size
- 10.16 x 2.54 x 15.24 cm
- ISBN-13
- 9781941026199
- ISBN-10
- 1941026192
- Price
- 2422 JPY
- Category
- 洋書/Mystery & Thrillers/Mystery/Hard-Boiled
Winner of the 2015 Dashiell Hammett Prize and 2016 Shamus Award 1959. Delpha Wade killed a man who was raping her. Wanted to kill the other one too, but he got away. Now, after fourteen years in prison, she’s out. It’s 1973, and nobody’s rushing to hire a parolee. Persistence and smarts land her a secretarial job with Tom Phelan, an ex-roughneck turned neophyte private eye. Together these two pry into the dark corners of Beaumont, a blue-collar, Cajun-influenced town dominated by Big Oil. A mysterious client plots mayhem against a small petrochemical company-why? Searching for a teenage boy, Phelan uncovers the weird lair of a serial killer. And Delpha on a weekend outing looks into the eyes of her rapist, the one who got away. The novel's conclusion is classic noir, full of surprise, excitement, and karmic justice. Sandlin's elegant prose, twisting through the dark thickets of human passion, allows Delpha to open her heart again to friendship, compassion, and sexuality. Lisa Sandlin 's story "Phelan's First Case" was anthologized in Lone Star Noir and was later re-anthologized in Akashic's Best of the Noir series, USA Noir . The Do-Right is her first full-length mystery. Lisa was born in Beaumont, currently lives and teaches in Omaha, Nebraska, and summers in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Lisa Sandlin's story "Phelan's First Case" was anthologized in Lone Star Noir and was later re-anthologized in Akashic's Best of the Noir series, USA Noir. The Do-Right is her first full-length mystery. Lisa was born in Beaumont, currently lives and teaches in Omaha, Nebraska, and summers in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Reviews
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First off it appeals to my love of noir novels in the vein of Raymond Chandler ...
The Do-Right spoke to me on many different levels. First off it appeals to my love of noir novels in the vein of Raymond Chandler and Ross MacDonald, of things going not quite right behind the veil of every day life. That it takes place at the end of the Nixon Era was also a bonus. But The Do-Right is also something much larger than that: it is a contemplation on the vary nature of freedom, of love, and the value of forgiveness over hate. Delpha Wade will worm her way into your brain and into your heart. She doesn't let go and you won't mind a bit. Delpha's boss, Tom Phelan, also grabs at you as the kind of guy whom you would not only like to spend a Saturday evening with drinking and shooting the s*** but someone you would trust to help you out of a pinch. He's much more than he seems in all of the right ways. There are also plenty of interesting supporting characters who help weave the story together. As someone else said, this novel would make a great season of True Detective as the plot masterfully winds its way through industrial espionage, revenge, and a good dose of pure, human, evil. What will truly last for me is the time spent in Delpha's head as she learns to navigate her life outside of prison. What freedom feels like for her and how she learns, bit by bit, to move beyond her past. She has much to say, and all of it is worth your time. The ending will surprise you and hopefully, like me, will make you smile.
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Southern noir with a compelling female lead.
This is brooding, slow-burn lit-crime set in Beaumont, Texas in the 1970s, with a great female lead. Great use of language enhances the setting and sense of place.
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Phenomenal - I want this story to go on and on…
If I don’t care about the characters who populate the pages - really care - then I don’t continue reading. Why bother? In The Do-Right, Lisa Sandlin introduces complex, flawed and amazing characters Delpha Wade and Tom Phelan (and a whole cast of others) who grabbed my imagination and wouldn’t let go. Anytime I stopped reading I couldn’t wait to get back to the book! As I neared the end I was grieving that the story was ending; I would miss these people. What happens next in their lives?
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a good person, trying to reintegrate into society
My first read by this author. An interesting representation of the key character, a good person, trying to reintegrate into society, housing, employment, and life, after tragic events that lead to her 14 year period of incarceration. How she acts, is perceived, and how she prevails.
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The Do-Right does well by the reader
A fast moving mystery set in the sticky August of 1973 in Beaumont, Texas, The Do-Right immerses us in a time and place commingled with anxieties and opportunities that come to life in the shape of the main characters. Delpha Wade and Tom Phelan are embarking on new starts against the backdrop of the Nixon Administration's last act. Tom, recently left a finger short by an oil drilling accident, is starting out as a private investigator, while Delpha is coming out of a fourteen year stretch in prison for killing her rapist. Tom hires Delpha as his secretary and the two find swimming legs in the deep waters of small town intrigue by doing well at work they were never trained or qualified to do. Sandlin's pacing is crisp and her language vivid with an ear turned to the penumbra of old Cajun and modern Texan. She hooks together chapters like a tow-rope and pulls the reader through the book we are reluctant to finish and bid adieu to these characters and this place.
Related Literary Awards
- Hammett Prize Edition 25 (2015) ・award