![]() ![]() ![]() But Katrina was no fictional event, and Burke writes about its aftermath as vividly and powerfully as any nonfiction chronicler. ![]() ![]() In a sense, Dave Robicheaux, Burke’s Cajun detective, whose heart is in the past and whose eyes are on the horizon, expecting trouble, has always been anticipating Katrina-or at least some form of cataclysm-as he has watched his world spin further and further out of control. I didn’t want to be part of the history taking place in our state.” That sentence wouldn’t be out of place in any of Burke’s Dave Robicheaux novels, all of which have been distinguished by their elegiac tone, but it’s only fitting that it should appear in his latest, a heartfelt post-Katrina ode to a lost New Orleans and a lost world. “I wanted to wake to the great, gold-green, sun-spangled promise of the South Louisiana in which I had grown up. ![]()
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