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"Two kinds of cops find their way to Portland's North Precinct: those who are sent there for punishment, and those who come for the action. Officer Hanson is the second kind, a veteran who survived the war in Vietnam only to decide he wanted to keep fighting at home. Hanson knows war, and in this battle for the Portland streets, he fights not for the law but for his own code of justice.Yet Hanson can't outrun his memories of another, warmer battleground. A past he thought he'd left behind, show more that now threatens to overshadow his future. An enemy, this time close to home, is prying into his war record. Pulling down the shields that protect the darkest moments of that fevered time. Until another piece of his past surfaces, and Hanson risks his career, his sanity - even his life - for honor."--Publisher description. show less

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Littlemissbashful Both feature ex Vietnam vets turned cop and corrupt police departments. The demons are the same but the response is different.

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8 reviews
Raw, angry, powerful novel set in the dying days of the Vietnam War. Hanson is ex-Special Forces, a veteran of the war who has become a cop on the streets of Portland, Oregon. Revelling in the squalor, the violence and the adrenaline, Hanson waxes cynical about the world, but struggles with an inner conflict between his addiction to the power of violence and his soldier's certainty that it's the only way to get anything done, and his own soft, liberal heart, to paraphrase the late James Crumley's introduction. Encounters with pimps and whore, drug dealers and winos, psychotic lunatics and enemies on his own side of the law are punctuated with acts of random, brutal violence and occasional flashes of human warmth. More of a novel than a show more straightforward thriller, with a novel's structure and concerns, this is a portrait of a damaged man in a damaged world. Highly recommended. show less
It's essential you first read Sympathy for the Devil, so you can understand the background of the character Hanson. Even though this book is full of flashbacks, you won't be able to develop the foreboding, the anxiety about what Hanson might do next if you haven't ready Sympathy for the Devil, which is, quite simply, one of the best-written books ever, and the most harrowing war novel I have ever read. Night Dogs it pretty harrowing as well, but it is even more episodic than Sympathy for the Devil and, so, falls a bit short of the intensity of that novel. The streets of Portland do bear an uncanny resemblance to the jungles of Vietnam at times, and the sense of nihilism that underlies Hanson's view of everything is always present. But show more he is trying, in his way, to be a better person. As in the first book in the series, his relationships with others a key part of the story, and here some of these relationships are almost normal--but these characters, especially his sometime girlfriend Sara--will surprise and even scare you. There are also passages of sheer great writing that set Anderson apart from his peers--if he even has any. He's truly one of the great overlooked writers of the 20th and 21st centuries. (I'm part way into the 3rd book of the series now, and despite the long gap in its writing, the story is just as engaging and strange. READ THIS SERIES ASAP!! show less
'Night Dogs' is a crime novel written over 20 years ago set in a period 20 years before that, yet it doesn't really seem dated. Yes, lots of forensic advances have taken place over the last 40 years that shape how police work is now performed, but the personalities and quirks of the law enforcement personnel, criminals, and everyday working folks are what really drive the action.

There are many unique aspects of Kent Anderson's 2nd book in his series that make it such a great one. The main character, Hanson, is a guy who doesn't undergo a typical character development sequence in the novel. You learn who he is by what he does, what he's thinking about before, after and during what he's doing, and though a few flashbacks to his previous show more life as a Special Forces soldier during the war in Vietnam. The book is almost entirely episodic and follows Hanson in his role as a cop in the Portland ghetto after his return from the war. He has a tough beat and a great partner. One theme involves a detective on the force who doesn't like Hanson and is trying to his best to get him out of the Department. Although this is a book without a traditional plot, that's one thread that follows through to the end.

The 70s were definitely a different era. No DNA, no video, no social media, lots of paper 'paperwork', fewer lawyers, lots of drugs and guns on the streets (maybe not so different....). 'Street justice' is dispensed when the police think it's appropriate based on a lack of confidence in the legal system. Hanson's character is a truly complex one. He's a badass as all Special Forces guys were, yet he doesn't push that side of himself to the front at all and tends to downplay his war experiences. Getting inside his mind as he and his partner are making insignificant, as well as life and death decisions at times, in the course of their daily routine is a real trip. They're balancing paperwork requirements, overtime restrictions, precinct boundaries, past experiences with the folks they're dealing with, compassion for the ghetto population vs. disgust at some of its inhabitants... it's a truly fascinating insight into how cops, or at least one cop at that point in time, think. Hanson has lots of problems and 'Night Dogs' succeeds in not only exposing them, but also showing how they've shaped and will continue to affect who he has become. He's definitely a flawed cop, but a very human one.

Anderson's writing is very sharp and his dialogue is excellent. As you might expect, there's a significant amount of violence and action, as well a some sex, involved. Night Dogs is a bit long but it moves quickly, with each relatively short chapter representing another 'day in the life'. Much of Hanson's character is determined by his war years, which I understand are covered in the initial book in this series. Can't wait to get to it!
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This is so far afield from what I generally read that I have little to compare it with. I don't read cop lit, ever. This was recommended to me by someone a long time ago, and so I picked it up on bookmooch.com and put it on the shelf. I have no idea why I threw it in my bag for a long flight. (When flying I generally opt for things so light they float.) Wow. This is not your average police procedural. It is gritty and raw and so painfully honest. Really it is more about reintegrating into American life after Vietnam - or maybe not reintegrating - than about police. It is about racism, and alpha male BS, it is about unimaginable lonliness even in a roomful of people, and taking control of the wrong things just so you have control of show more something. By book's end, the way I look at the world had been altered. It brought to mind one of my very favorite late 20th century books, The Things they Caarried (though it is very different other than the Vietnam theme). I recommend this unreservedly but it is not for those moments you are looking for something comforting or something with a true sense of resolution show less
A lot of violence and death. A masterpiece. Hard to say why. You have to read it and "feel" it. It is so real and depressing but you can't stop reading. This book brings you down with it.

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Kellner, Michael (Cover artist)

Awards and Honors

Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1999

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Mystery
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3551 .N3744 .N54Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
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Members
190
Popularity
170,540
Reviews
5
Rating
(3.95)
Languages
English, French, Italian
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
12
ASINs
3