Mr. Burke,
My family recently moved back to the US after a 6-plus year stay in Asia. Life in Tokyo, Japan was wonderful, but the nightmarish stories about the commuter trains during rush hour are completely true. I honestly don't know how I would have managed the 25 minute commute from Toritsu-daigaku station to Kamiyacho station in the morning without your audio books. I would ready myself on the platform, and when the train arrived, I would sandwich myself in between dozens of harried passengers who seemed at best resigned, and at worst, miserable. My arms would be pinned at my side, so it was essential that my iPod be at the ready in my left palm. The doors would shut, the scrum would tighten, and when I established a sustainable position, I would shut my eyes, press the button, and off I would go......
I have read all your novels from the Robicheaux series, and listened to a favorite five more than once. To make a person forget the misery of a sardine-like commute is no mean feat, and you, with the magical assistance of Will Patton, carried me along Bayou Teche and made me "think alive" while I was willing my physical person away inside that train car. The audio book experience can be hit or miss, but your prose and Mr. Patton's rendering made my commute so transcendant that if Wee Willie and Nig offered to spring me from that Tokyo train in exchange for my iPod, my response would have been a simple "no dice.."
Keep em' coming, and keep Mr. Patton busy. It is a source of fascination how one man can so authentically re-create the voice of so many well drawn characters, and I can't wait for the next batch. In this New Yorker's opinion, Patton's Clete Purcell is unmatched, and that Irish Channel accent makes me wonder if Clete's parents didn't leave Flatbush in the middle of the night for a Big Easy that was anything but....
Best Wishes,
PJ Kelly
