Lufkin Daily News review

LUFKIN DAILY NEWS
Books Column
March 3, 2002

by JAY MILNER

Christopher Cook is a native of Texas who has lived abroad and now resides in Prague, Czech Republic. He wrote a novel titled Robbers published by Carroll and Graf in 2000 that was praised widely. A New York Times reviewer said Cook has a “lyric voice that sings itself raw.”

I was fortunate enough recently to come across a book of Cook’s short stories titled Screen Door Jesus & Other Stories, a collection I enjoyed and recommend to anyone who likes good writing.

This is a collection of stories, or episodes really, set in East Texas, southeast Texas actually, in the piney woods section. All but one or two episodes are set in the fictional town of Bethlehem, a deep East Texas town where most of the people are deeply involved in a fundamentalist religion. In fact, the one criticism I have of this collection is that everyone in the town and surrounding communities appear to be fundamental religious fanatics.

But maybe Cook is laying it out this way to make a point and make a point he certainly does. He’s a good writer who sets the atmosphere and characters very well. He even lets us peek at the humor of the various situations, which is a relief in some places.

The title short story, “Screen Door Jesus,” tells of a woman in Bethlehem who discovers one day that a portrait of Jesus can be seen on the screen of her front door if the light hits it just right. The word spreads and soon people are driving in from miles around to see the phenomenon. The news spreads faster and farther until her front lawn is trampled into mud and her privacy is destroyed. Her neighbor across the street is selling parking spaces on his lot and people are selling peanuts and sandwiches to the crowds that gather daily.

 

—Christopher

Robbers – Quotes from Reviews & Authors

 

Robbers remains one of my favorite first novels of the last decade. More, please, sir.”
(BOOKLIST)

“An adrenaline bomb of a crime novel… a rhythm that is strictly four on the floor.”
(LOS ANGELES TIMES BOOK REVIEW)

“I couldn’t put the book down. The dialogue is masterful, the characters spring from the page… Don’t miss this one.”
(THE SUNDAY TIMES – LONDON)

“A debut novel with classic noir bones … Cook covers it with fearless originality, in a lyric voice that sings itself raw.”
(THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW)

“I never put this book down once after I opened it, except to underline passages and even to write a few of them down… as compelling as anything you’ve read.”
(THE BOOK REPORT, bookreport.com)

Robbers is a full-tilt boogie of a tale that wraps nearly every genre of Texas fiction into one tightly wound bundle… one of best novels of contemporary Texas yet written… It’s a book to stay up all night with… a chicken-fried ‘Pulp Fiction.’”
(DALLAS MORNING NEWS)

“Cook clearly has the suspense-building gene; his writing, fluid yet visceral, compels the reader to hang in there while the nerve-jangling plot tick-tick-ticks toward its explosive end.”
(TEXAS MONTHLY)

“Narrative gold, spun from violence, bittersweet humor, beauty, and terror. The alchemist is Christopher Cook, whose first novel is a noir powerhouse: uncompromising and authentic… Think James Lee Burke and Elmore Leonard, but think William Faulkner and Cormac McCarthy too.”
(AMAZON.COM)

“This gritty crime drama is not for the faint of heart.”
(PUBLISHERS WEEKLY)

“Christopher Cook settles back to give us a lively, darkly comic, enormously entertaining crime novel about two ex-cons on the run, the young woman they hook up with and the Texas Ranger who pursues them like a force of nature.”
(HOUSTON CHRONICLE)

From other authors…

“Christopher Cook writes like an angel…I haven’t enjoyed a novel this much in years. This is a terrific book and I can’t wait for the next one.”
       —James Crumley, author of The Last Good Kiss

“If Elmore Leonard lived in Texas, his name would be Christopher Cook.”
       —Kinky Friedman, author of The Mile High Club

“My kind of book.”
       —James Ellroy, author of L.A. Confidential

“From Elmore Leonard’s laconic flair with the dumb and dangerous to James Lee Burke’s lyric feel for dark hearts in a New South—Robbers ranges wild and wide, deep through the heart of Texas. Cook has a talent big enough to take his natural-born killers in richly traveled territory he makes memorably his own.”
       —Michael Malone, author of Time’s Witness

 

—Christopher

Publishers Weekly review

PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
October 9, 2000

The harsh, foreboding essence of rural Texas dominates Cook’s bloody, bittersweet debut novel, charting the adventures of two criminal drifters and their pursuer…

The boys’ aimless adventure eventually includes Della, a woman who patterns her life on women’s magazines and desperately aspires to middle-class respectability… as crafty Texas Ranger, Rule Hooks, picks up their scent. Hooks, a tracker by training and instinct, relies on modern police methods as well as his gut instincts to sniff out his prey.

Cook’s plot tumbles from scene to scene with jarring brilliance, the pathos of his characters lending his otherwise brutal world a certain beauty. His imagery is striking, almost lyrical…

This gritty crime drama is not for the faint of heart, but Cook’s prose sets it a notch above many like novels. The publisher compares the book to the work of James Lee Burke; if booksellers push this comparison, or if they aim the title at a hip, youthful readership, it could make out like a bandit.

 

—Christopher