
FeverBy
Sean Rowe; Read by
William Dufris5 CDs - Approx 6 Hours [UNABRIDGED]
Publisher:
Tantor MediaPublished: 2005
ISBN: 1400101778
Themes: / Crime / Heist / Noir / Thriller / Terrorism / Florida / Cuba / Nautical / Family /
Raw, is probably the best one-word sum up of Sean Rowe's first novel Fever. Rowe's prose lacks the polish found in novelists like Lawrence Block, Donald Westlake and Elmore Leonard, but he doesn't lack what it takes to eventually become worthy of hanging out with these masters, especially if he keeps writing like this!
Fever follows a tight knit group of fuck-ups through their attempt to rob $30 Million dollars of stashed drug money from an aging cruise ship plying the waters between Miami and Cuba. The crew, on paper at least, looks like it should be able to handle anything. It consists of an ex-FBI agent Matt Shannon, his step brother an ex-DEA agent named Jack Fontana, an emergency room nurse named Julia, a former Black Panther and South American soldier of fortune. Despite their collective skill set these are all losers in almost every way. Shannon's past is slowly revealed, working backwards we know that he's an in-debt alcoholic, with a dead wife, missing index finger and a step-brother who'ss a recently paroled felon. When his step brother frames him in the sinking of a freighter Shannon is half blackmailed into going along, with a vague desire to somehow help his brother. The rest of the crew are nearly as sad, Julia was an orphan sexually abused from a young age. Fontana is dying after serving his sentence and even the minor characters have their share of problems.... one passage detailing the last job the mercenary took killing Indians in the jungles of South America is brutal, funny and illustrative of just how unlikely this string will be of pulling off this or any job. The malformed love triangle between Shannon, his brother, and Julia pays off in a tasty neo-noir style too. In fact love, brotherly and the other kind is probably at the heart of this story. Fever is extremely enjoyable, the dialogue is crisp and fun, the scenes are imaginative and original and a constant surprise awaits in every chapter. None of it goes exactly according to plan and that makes it all the better to follow. The novel's few problems seem mostly structural, scene transitions aren't handled as well as I'd like and despite it being a first person perspective we never really get an idea of what's going on inside the narrator's head. This could be a deliberate style on the part of Rowe, as both flaws could be thought to pay off in certain ways later in on the book, but I'm thinking a more seasoned novelist might have been better able to give us everything. I eagerly look forward to reading the next Sean Rowe novel!
Read by the always reliable William Dufris, the first person perspective plays into such classics as Double Indemnity and The Postman Always Rings Twice. Dufris' natural timbre doesn't exactly embody the gravelly voiced loser we imagine as the narrator but his voicing of the rest of the crew is spot on. Men, women, a Columbian drug lord, the string and even minor characters like an aging boxer all sound just like you'd want them to. Tantor Media, an exciting new player in unabridged audiobooks has packaged Fever in a clamshell CD case with leaved pages. The cover is the same as the Little Brown & Co. original and the sound quality is phenomenal. The pricing is extremely reasonable too. I think Tantor is probably the most exciting new big little publisher of the decade!
posted by Jesse