Showing posts with label dave robicheaux. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dave robicheaux. Show all posts

Sunday, February 18, 2018

Robicheaux returns in James Lee Burke's latest

Detective Dave Robicheaux, the ongoing character in James Lee Burke’s novels set mostly in Louisiana, remains a man no one can kill, not even from his own hand when his dormant alcoholism rears its ugly head. I’ve been reading Burke’s novels for years now and am always wondering if Robicheaux has met his fate and will be gone to us forever.

To our relief, he always returns.

Burke’s latest in the series, aptly titled “Robicheaux,” has our New Iberia native struggling after the death of his beloved wife, Molly, in a car accident. He confronts the man who slammed into her and, after a blackout following a drunken relapse, that man is found murdered. While Robicheaux wonders if he committed the act and works to clear his name, there are other pressing matters, including a psychopath named Tony Squid who wants to get into the business of making movies; a novelist whose wife cheats on him and accuses the other man of rape; and an abusive father who's horribly killed. Add to the mix Robicheaux’s best friend Clete, who’s got troubles of his own, and his daughter Alafair, who wants to adapt one of the novelist’s books and you’ve got prime Burke storytelling.

Read the Dave Robicheaux novels for the dark and intriguing plotlines but savor the incredible descriptions that pour from Burke’s pen. For instance:

“I love the rain, whether it’s a tropical one or one that falls on you in the dead of winter. For me, rain is the natural world’s absolution, like the story of the Flood and new beginnings and loading the animals two by two onto the Ark. I love the mist hanging in the trees, a hint of wraiths that would not let heavy stones weigh them down in their graves, the raindrops clicking on the lily pads, the fish rising as though in celebration.”


I don’t know how many more Robicheaux stories are in my future, but let’s hope the detective who has danger constantly nipping at his heels stays alive for a few more years.


Louisiana Book News is written by award-winning author Chere Dastugue Coen, who writes romances and mysteries under the pen name of Cherie Claire. Her first book in each series is FREE to download as an ebook, including "A Ghost of a Chance," the first Viola Valentine mystery.

Friday, December 8, 2017

Ernest J. Gaines chosen as 'Great Southern Writer' for April 2018's Books Along the Teche Literary Festival

Award-winning Louisiana author Ernest J. Gaines will be the featured “Great Southern Writer” at the Books Along the Teche Literary Festival: Celebrating New Iberia, Dave Robicheaux's Hometown and Great Southern Writers April 6 -8, 2018, in downtown New Iberia. Gaines recently debuted his latest book, “The Tragedy of Brady Sims,” at the 2017 National Book Festival in Washington, D.C.

Ernest J. Gaines is a world-renowned novelist, short story writer, and teacher. He is among the most widely read and highly respected contemporary authors of African American fiction. Gaines was born in Pointe Coupee Parish in Louisiana and later enrolled at San Francisco State University where he began publishing stories in the university’s quarterly literary journal. These stories secured him a place in Stanford University’s graduate program for creative writing.

In 1971, Gaines completed the work that was to make him famous, “The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman,” which later was made into a film. In 1981, he accepted the position of Writer-in-Residence at the then University of Southwestern Louisiana in Lafayette (now the University of Louisiana at Lafayette). Not long into his tenure, he published “A Gathering of Old Men” (1983) followed by “A Lesson Before Dying,” one of his most critically acclaimed novels. Both novels were also made into films. Gaines retired in 2004 and became Writer-in-Residence Emeritus at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. “The Tragedy of Brady Sims” was published in August.


He and his wife, Dianne, live in Oscar, Louisiana, near the plantation where Gaines was born and raised.

Gaines will speak at the Sliman Theater (129 E. Main St., New Iberia) at 3 p.m. Saturday, April 7, 2018, and the presentation will include a question and answer session with the audience. Attendance is free, but organizers are asking participants to reserve a seat via Eventbrite, as this is anticipated to be a standing room only event.


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The festival is an event of the Iberia Preservation Alliance, formed by the Iberia Cultural Resources Association, the Bayou Teche Museum, Shadows-on-the-Teche and the New Iberia Main Street Program. The 2018 festival is supported by a grant from the Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities and the National Endowment for the Humanities. 

More information is available at BooksAlongTheTecheLiteraryFestival.com and on Facebook. For travel information, please visit IberiaTravel.com.

Louisiana Book News is written by journalist Chere Dastugue Coen, an author of both non-fiction titles and novels, all dealing with the colorful state of Louisiana. You can find this column on Sundays in The Advertiser of Lafayette and the News-Star of Monroe, Louisiana. Write her at cherecoen@gmail.com.

Sunday, July 23, 2017

Louisiana is choke full of great writers

I recently had the pleasure of speaking at the eighth annual Berries, Bridges and Books Writers Conference in Ponchatoula, and it was there I was fortunate to meet several wonderful authors and get the literary lowdown.

Vicky Branton, Teche Life editor at the Daily Iberian in New Iberia, doubles as the town’s literary champion. She informed me that the Dave Robichaux Festival, which honors the main character of the James Lee Burke novels, has been renamed Books Along the Teche Literary Festival and will be held April 6-8 in New Iberia. She explained that some people who had never read Burke’s mysteries shied away from the literary event, even though there was always something for everyone. The festival still celebrates Dave Robicheaux and his home town, Branton insisted.

I got to meet Colleen Mooney and Mary Beth Magee, two authors who will be on the Louisiana Women of Mystery panel, of which I’m moderating, Oct. 28 at the Louisiana Book Festival in Baton Rouge. Mooney writes locally-set mysteries such as “New Orleans Go Cup” and “Drive Thru Murder.” Magee writes Christian cozy mysteries and her latest is “Ambush at the Arboretum.”

Linda Thurman spoke on filmmaking in Louisiana, pointing out locations for numerous films shot here, along with some fascinating facts about early cinema. She is the author of “Hollywood South: Glamour, Gumbo, and Greed,” which chronicles the state’s filmmaking industry since 1895. Yes, you heard right. Did you know that brief film clips were shown at West End Park on Lake Pontchartrain and that Vitascope Hall on Canal Street was the first motion picture theater in America? Her book is full of nuggets like these.

Kathleen Schrenk spoke on children’s books. Her middle grade novel, “A Dog Steals Home,” features 11-year-old Zach Stewart of New Orleans who explores the themes of family, friendship and animal welfare. Schrenk is a former middle school teacher, a volunteer reading tutor and Junior Great Books leader. She is also the founding member of Nola City Bark, the first off-leash dog park in New Orleans. You can read more about her books, plus invite her to speak at everything from schools to animal shelters at https://kathleenschrenk.com.

In the prolific category is Michael Verret of Morgan City and Bayou Vista, who told me he has authored and illustrated dozens and dozens of books — and all kinds too. He’s a retired homicide detective and currently works in the Governor’s Office of Homeland Security. He gives programs too, ones to inspire young people and keep them out of the system.

Jack Caldwell is no slacker either. Check out his lineup, everything from the historical “The Plains of Chalmette” and “Rosings Park” to the modern “Crescent City” trilogy.  You can read more about this “Cajun in Exile” — he now lives in Florida — at http://cajuncheesehead.com/.

There’s more to tell but I’ll have to save those authors for a future column.
           
Contest
The Tennessee Williams/New Orleans Literary Festival annual writing contests are now on in several categories, including a new category in flash fiction. Here are the categories and deadlines: short stories of up to 1,000 words, due Nov. 8; one-act plays no longer than an hour, due Nov. 1; two to four poems with a combined length of up to 400 lines, due Nov. 15; and fiction up to 7,000 words, Nov. 30. For information, visit http://tennesseewilliams.net/contests/.

New releases
Dr. Scharmaine Baker, a nationally recognized and award-winning nurse practitioner in New Orleans, wanted to find books about nursing that were both culturally sensitive and featured African American characters. Finding the pickings sparse, she took it upon herself to fill the gap. The result is the “Nola the Nurse” children’s book series, stories that also encourage children to pursue careers in the STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) fields. Some of the books in the series are “Nola the Nurse, She’s on the Go” and “Nola the Nurse Remembers Hurricane Katrina.” In addition to her story books, Baker hopes to inspire little girls throughout New Orleans with her dolls, activity books and coloring books. For more information, to book engagements and to purchase books, visit http://www.nolathenurse.com.
 
Carroll Morgan of Crowley, who’s had an impressive 34 years of law enforcement experience, has recently published “The Memoirs of a Small Town Christian Police Officer,” released through Christian Faith Publishing. To watch a trailer for the book, visit https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GvYvsbYsyq0.

Book news
South Arts, a Regional Arts Organization serving nine states in the Southeast, has announced grants to 24 arts organizations throughout the region, including The Festival of Words Cultural Arts Collective in Grand Coteau, which received a $1,730 grant to present writers Allison Joseph and Patricia Smith at this year’s November festival, and the McNeese Foundation in Lake Charles, which received a $2,041 grant to present Alina Fernandez in March 2018. These grants, made possible through funding from the National Endowment for the Arts, support organizations presenting out-of-state fiction, creative nonfiction and poetry authors for publicly accessible readings and educational activities.“Literary arts are profoundly important to the cultural identity of the south,” said Susie Surkamer, executive director of South Arts. Amen to that.

Book events
Sunday Salon: Four Poets will feature readings by Bessie Senette, Clare L. Martin, Debra McDonald Bailey and Gina Ferrara from 3-5 p.m. today at Artmosphere in Lafayette. All four women are contributors to MockingHeart Review, a Louisiana-based poetry magazine. 

Julia Glass is the author of five books of fiction, including the best-selling “Three Junes,” winner of the National Book Award, and “I See You Everywhere,” winner of the Binghamton University John Gardner Fiction Book Award. She’ll be discussing and signing “A House Among Trees” at 6 p.m. Tuesday at Octavia Books of New Orleans.

John Bicknell discusses and signs his book, “Lincoln's Pathfinder: John C. Fremont and the Violent Election of 1856,” at 2 p.m. Sunday, July 30, at Garden District Book Shop of New Orleans.

Cheré Coen is the author of “Forest Hill, Louisiana: A Bloom Town History,” “Haunted Lafayette, Louisiana” and “Exploring Cajun Country.” She writes Louisiana romances and mysteries under the pen name of Cherie Claire. Write her at cherecoen@gmail.com.

Friday, February 24, 2017

Robicheaux festival lineup announced

Literary detective Dave Robicheaux, created by author James Lee Burke, is coming home to Iberia Parish with his second festival. The official Dave Robicheaux's Hometown Literary Festival: Celebrating Storytellersfrom Iberia and Beyond will be March 31-April 2, 2017, in New Iberia's historic district and around Iberia Parish.

Friday kicks off with "Tin Roof Throwdown" featuring cooking demos by Cane River Pecan, Konriko Rice Mill and Tabasco. That afternoon, guided Dave Robicheaux motor coach tours start participants off with lunch at Dave's favorite diner, Victor's Cafeteria, and then a tour around Iberia Parish to visit locations like New Iberia's Main Street, the Teche Motel, Iberia Parish Courthouse and the Bayou Teche. Writing workshops for aspiring authors will also be held.

Friday night gets moving with "Bayou City Jam," a pig-roast party at the Shadows-on-the-Teche, where a jazz band will serenade guests as they dine on the grounds of this National Trust plantation home. Saturday starts with the Neon Rain 5K Run, followed by a University of Louisiana at Lafayette Academic Symposium featuring Burke scholar Patricia Gaitely, and an author/publisher roundtable. Iberia Performing Arts League actors will perform reader's theater of a Dave Robicheaux novel. Award winning Southern writer Margaret Wrinkle will also give a presentation that afternoon.

At "Eat With Clete" there will be live music and Cajun delicacies in Bouligny Plaza. Books Along the Teche will hold an author fair and book signing along Main Street. Bourée lessons and a tournament will also take place. The Friday motor coach tour of Dave's favorite haunts will be repeated on Saturday, complete with lunch at Victor's.

On Saturday evening "Black Cherry Boogie" will showcase Cajun food and music for a good ol' fais-do-do. Grab a drink and stroll down Main Street to see why Dave Robicheaux always wanted to come back home.

During the weekend, the Grand Theater will show several free screenings of "In the Electric Mist" starring Tommy Lee Jones.

On Sunday, Batiste's Bayou Teche Adventure Boat Tours will launch out of New Iberia City Park. The afternoon will culminate with a free Symphony Sunday in the Park featuring the Acadiana Symphony Orchestra under the live oaks of New Iberia's City Park.

For more information, contact Cathy Indest, (337) 298-7964, cathy.indest@lhcgroup.com or visit DaveRobicheauxLiteraryFestival.com and Facebook.com/DaveRobicheauxLiteraryFestival

Cheré Coen is the author of “Forest Hill, Louisiana: A Bloom Town History,” “Haunted Lafayette, Louisiana” and “Exploring Cajun Country” by the History Press. She writes Louisiana romances and mysteries under the pen name of Cherie Claire. Write her at cherecoen@gmail.com.

Sunday, September 18, 2016

New Orleans investigative journalist Ethan Brown revisits Jeff Davis 8 in stirring new book

            The deaths of eight women in Jefferson Davis Parish between 2005 and 2009 have been the subject of many news outlets, including CNN and the New York Times. In 2014, New Orleans investigative journalist Ethan Brown published a long-form article on Medium.com titled “Who Killed the Jeff Davis 8?” that caused quite a stir, eluding that law enforcement officials in Jennings and Lake Arthur were involved in a sex and drug operation that resulted in those women’s deaths.
            Naturally, the fallback was intense. Brown was warned about taking the research further. He ignored that advice and his book “Murder in the Bayou: Who Killed the Women Known as the Jeff Davis 8?” hit bookshelves Tuesday.
            “One of my contacts in southwest Louisiana who is deeply connected to the case told me, ‘I’ve already heard more than once that you’ll never get that book out.  You can take that however you want to. But is that book worth your life?’” Brown relates in the book.
            Once again, Brown suggests that the homicides were not the work of a serial killer but the fallout of Jenning’s sex and drug trade, linked to police involvement.
            The book offers in great detail through hundreds of hours of interviews and thousands of public records obtained by Brown that an elaborate system of corruption occurred and is possibly still occurring in Jefferson Davis Parish. He shows us the lives of the eight women and others who have died, pieces together information gleaned from witnesses and interviews and produces a disturbing scenario of crime and injustice. He also suggests that Rep. Charles Boustany, a current candidate for the Senate, had links to the owner of the hotel where crimes occurred.
            It’s a complicated web of intrigue and murder and one that will haunt you long after you put the book down. Why nothing has been done to those accused is even more frightening.
John Berendt, author of “Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil” says this of the book: “Ethan Brown’s daring and dangerous exposé uncovers a murky inferno of violence and corruption in south Louisiana, where it’s hard to tell the good guys from the bad, and the brutal murders of eight prostitutes go unpunished, though not necessarily unsolved.”
            Brown will be discussing and signing his book at 6 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 21, at Octavia Books of New Orleans.

New releases
Patricia M. Gaitley was fascinated by the rich culture found in James Lee Burke novels featuring Louisiana detective Dave Robicheaux. She studied his novels and their sense of place while getting a Ph.D. at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. Gaitley discusses Burke’s rich examination of South Louisiana folkways in “Robicheaux’s Roots: Culture and Tradition in James Lee Burke’s Dave Robicheaux Novels,” published by LSU Press.
“In creating Dave Robicheaux, Burke provides his readers with not only a character, but a culture,” Gaitley writes in the book’s introduction.
            Gaitley will be speaking on her book Oct. 29 at the Louisiana Book Festival in Baton Rouge and the One Book One Festival section will be “Creole Belle,” a Dave Robicheaux mystery by Burke.
Bessie Senette of Lafayette has published “Cutting the Clouds: a Bayou Mystic’s Poems, Musings, and Imaginings,” an autobiographical collection of poems and essays about the life and culture of her bayou upbringing and the spirituality that informs her traditional healing gifts. Read more about her at https://thebayoumystic.com.
            Tallulah Caibre of Brooklyn, Miss., has a gift, although it’s not as strong as the rest of the family’s talents. It’s because of these quirky abilities that the town’s residents dare not come too close, especially after tragedy strikes and Tallulah realizes her talents are more than she imagined, in Em Shotwell’s gothic Southern novel, “Blackbird Summer.” Shotwell lives in South Louisiana where she writes “Southern-fried fantasy and magical realism.”

National Book Festival
            The 16th Library of Congress National Book Festival, the nation’s largest free book festival, will be Saturday in Washington, D.C. Representing Louisiana is children’s book author Johnette Downing who has just published an adorable book tied with the New Orleans Pelicans NBA Team and Audubon Nature Institute titled “Petit Pierre and the Floating Marsh.” The book is illustrated by Heather Stanley and helps children learn about the beauty and importance of Louisiana’s wetlands. Downing will be discussing and signing her book at 9 a.m. at the festival.
            Other authors participating include civil rights legend and graphic novelist Rep. John Lewis, NBA superstar Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Caldecott Award-winning artist and writer Jerry Pinkney, documentarian Ken Burns, New Yorker writer Calvin Trillin, rising star Yaa Gyasi, best-selling thriller writer Harlan Coben, Mexican novelist Álvaro Enrigue, historian Candice Millard, best-selling novelist Kristin Hannah, New Yorker cultural critic Adam Gopnik, Moroccan-born novelist Laila Lalami and two-time Newbery Medal winner Lois Lowry.
For more information, visit loc.gov/bookfest/.
 
Book events
Jack McGuire will talk about his new book, “Win the Race or Die Trying: Uncle Earl’s Last Hurrah,” about Earl Long's successful 1960 campaign for Louisiana's Eighth Congressional District seat, at 7 p.m. Wednesday at South Regional Branch Library in Lafayette.
            Leigh Camacho Rourks and Caitlin Vance will read as part of the Thursday Night Reading presented by the UL-Lafayette English Department, EGSA and Sigma Tau Delta at 7 p.m. Thursday at Poets, 1043 Johnston St.


Cheré Coen is the author of “Forest Hill, Louisiana: A Bloom Town History,” “Haunted Lafayette, Louisiana” and “Exploring Cajun Country.” She writes Louisiana romances under the pen name of Cherie Claire. Write her at cherecoen@gmail.com.

Thursday, April 7, 2016

New Iberia to host Dave Robicheaux Literary Fest

People from all over the world visit New Iberia to walk in the steps of Dave Robicheaux, the main character of James Lee Burke’s novels. Now, there’s a festival to the recovering alcoholic, former New Orleans police office, always solving mysteries guy in Burke’s best-selling series.
The inaugural Dave Robicheaux’s Hometown Literary Festival: Celebrating Storytellers from Iberia and Beyond will be this upcoming weekend (April 8-10) with storytelling, authors reading and selling books, theatrical vignettes, live music, local cuisine, bourré lessons, film screenings of “In the Electric Mist” and tours of the places fictional character Robicheaux visited.
The University of Louisiana at Lafayette will host a symposium titled “Dave Robicheaux and Acadiana” at the Shadows-on-the-Teche Visitor Center and include authors Barbara Bogue, author of a critical study titled “James Lee Burke and the Soul of Dave Robicheaux;” Shane Bernard, multi-published author and historian at Avery Island; Kathryn Dubus, Burke’s first cousin; plus local authors Claire Manes, Saw Irwin, Anne Simon, Margaret Simon and Alice J. Voorhies speaking on regionalism in fictionThe symposium is free and open to the public; call Sally Donlon at (337) 482-2964. For more information about the festival (some events require a fee), visit http://iberiatravel.com/james-lee-burke.
You can read more about the festival in an article I wrote for The Advocate of Baton Rouge. Click here.