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Dust Devils

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On the run after being framed for murdering his family, South African journalist Robert Dell's only ally is his oldest enemy: his father. Bobby Goodbread, an ex-CIA hitman just sprung from prison for atrocities he committed whilst in the employ of the apartheid regime, joins his son on a bloody cross-country road trip, bringing his killing skills and his hunger for redemption.From picture-postcard Cape Town to a Zulu tribal valley where AIDS, savage feuds and poverty have left the population as gutted as the parched red earth, father and son hunt down assassin Dog Mazibuko, uncovering a conspiracy that reaches to the highest levels of the South African State. They cross paths with another man on a desperate mission: ex-investigator Disaster Zondi, returning to the place he fled as a youth to rescue a teenage girl - who may or may not be his daughter - sold into marriage to Mazibuko. These men are thrown together in a spiral of violence and retribution in a country where corruption and anarchy have replaced brutal tyranny and human life has never been cheaper.

306 pages, Kindle Edition

First published June 27, 2011

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About the author

Roger Smith

11 books118 followers
Roger Smith's thrillers Nowhere, Man Down, Sacrifices, Capture, Dust Devils, Wake Up Dead, Mixed Blood & Ishmael Toffee are published in eight languages and two are in development as movies in the U.S.

His books have won the German Crime Award and been nominated for Spinetingler Magazine Best Novel awards. He also writes horror under the pen name Max Wilde.

“Roger Smith writes with brutal beauty." The Washington Post

“Smith’s writing is astonishing.” Cleveland Plain Dealer

“You’ll struggle to find a more forceful voice in current crime writing.”
Die Zeit (Germany)

“Smith is the shooting star of the crime scene.” Radio Europe

"If you are a fan of George Pelecanos or Dennis Lehane, give Roger Smith a close look." BookPage

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 75 reviews
Profile Image for Kemper.
1,389 reviews7,642 followers
September 4, 2014
(I received a free copy of this book from New Pulp Press for this review.)

This book starts out with infidelity, murder, more murder and political/police corruption.

Then things really get dark.

Robert Dell is a white South African journalist who protested apartheid. He’s a liberal, a committed pacifist and married to a black woman. His father, Bobby Goodbread, proves that sometimes the apple falls a long way from the tree. Goodbread is an American who got up to all kinds of evil deeds as part of his job as a CIA agent fighting communism in various hot spots. He worked with the right-wing whites in South Africa to keep apartheid in place and liked to brag that it was his information that led to the capture of Nelson Mandela. As you would expect, the two have little to talk about.

Dell is framed for a horrible crime by Inja Mazibuko, a brutal enforcer for a high ranking government official. As he’s about to be transferred to a prison where he’ll almost certainly be killed Dell is rescued by his estranged father. With no other options, Dell reluctantly joins Goodbread on a mission of revenge.

Mazibuko has returned to a remote region that he runs like a warlord so that he can marry his fourth wife. Sunday is a young girl who has essentially been sold to Mazibuko, and the prospect is terrifying since she witnessed him murdering her family when she was a child. Her desperate attempt to seek help in the form of a fax to an old phone number lands on the desk of Disaster Zondi, a police officer who just saw his department gutted by corruption. Zondi is from the area and used to be part of the same crew as Mazibuko before changing his ways. He also knew Sunday’s mother, and he returns to his old stomping grounds for reasons he doesn’t fully understand.

The opening chapters of this made me think that his was going to be a fast-paced violent thrill ride, and while the pace is brisk and there’s no shortage of carnage, there’s a lot more going on in this book than just a story about people trying to kill each other in the wilds of Africa. The poverty stricken area here is a mix of Zulu tribal rituals and superstitions mixed with bits of the modern world like BMWs, cell phones and AK-47s.

The major characters are all extremely well developed, and Smith makes you completely understand them all from the liberal and educated Dell to the teenaged Sunday who has never used a modern bathroom. Zondi’s return to the place he grew up stirs mixed emotions about the boy he used to be and the man he became once he left. Goodbread is fascinating as an aging Cold Warrior who thought he was doing the right thing at the time. Particularly disturbing is Mazibuko whose is almost a force of nature in his ruthlessness, and he makes for one spectacularly evil villain.

Just when you think you know where the story is going, there’ll be a surprising but logical twist and nothing goes as expected. It’s not a happy read, but it’s an intriguing one.

Also posted at Kemper's Book Blog.
Profile Image for Miquel Codony.
Author 12 books311 followers
May 7, 2012
Aquella era una tierra de conflictos shakespeareanos. Clanes del mismo estrecho valle que vivían enfrentados y peleados a muerte por motivos olvidados en el tiempo.

Ya hace un tiempo que vengo leyendo cosas buenas sobre la novela negra que se está escribiendo desde Sudáfrica, por lo que cuando la gente de Es Pop Ediciones  me dio la oportunidad de participar, junto a otros blogueros, en la lectura conjunta de Diablos de Polvo , el libro de Roger Smith con el que inauguran su Colección Pulpo Negro, no dudé ni un segundo. Tres días después cerraba el libro y dos minutos después de cerrarlo encargaba otra novela del autor. Cuando algo me gusta quiero más.

Un Diablo de Polvo es un torbellino más o menos intenso que se produce cuando entran en contacto el aire caliente cercano al suelo y un bolsillo de aire frío, provocando una corriente ascendente intensa que arrastra el polvo y lo esparce al bajar de nuevo su temperatura. La imagen tiene connotaciones de choque, brusquedad y desorden, así que se ajusta como un guante al espíritu de esta violenta novela. Ambientada en la Sudáfrica post-apartheid de nuestros días, la historia combina los puntos de vista de cuatro personajes conectados por la tragedia lanzados sin frenos hacia un encuentro que no promete nada bueno.  Se me antoja, sin saber si se ajusta a la intención del autor, que con cada encuentro se produce uno de los diablos de polvo que dan título al libro, dando lugar a una explosión de caos que cambia el terreno juego y a los personajes. La gran violencia del libro está descrita con una asepsia perturbadora,  desprovista de énfasis y sin regodeo, que parece sugerir que escandalizarse está fuera de lugar, que esa violencia es tan natural como que salga el sol por la mañana. Smith sabe esparcir a lo largo del texto observaciones e imágenes que aumentan su capacidad de evocación y lo convierten en algo más que un mero entretenimiento con exceso de testosterona. En su prosa se aprecia un esfuerzo de depuración que parece responder menos al intento de ser facilón que al de maximizar su impacto manteniendo el realismo y acercándose en ocasiones al lirismo. Sus virtudes como narrador se encuentran tanto en su capacidad, casi fotográfica y desprovista de sentido del humor, de retratar diferentes escalas de violencia como en su habilidad para dar una voz memorable a los personajes e insertarlos en el contexto de un país tan singular, con una historia tan convulsa, como Sudáfrica (será injusto, pero se me han quitado todas las ganas de visitarlo). El libro, en mi opinión, sin pretender romper fronteras ni deslumbrar a base de estilo, no está desprovisto de ambición literaria y supone un éxito a muchos niveles. Poco a poco, frase a frase y con escritura atenta, la prosa de Smith va dibujando un país desolador, miserable y cubierto por una pátina de mugre que va más allá de lo puramente estético y apunta a una podredumbre del espíritu del que nadie escapa si no es por defunción. Fijaos que no me refiero, porque no me importa mucho, a que la visión de Sudáfrica que da el libro sea realista, sino a la capacidad (estrictamente literaria) del autor de generar una atmósfera verosímil en la que incrustar su historia. Puede discutirse si la novela es más cercana al noir o al thriller, pero en el atrevimiento de mi ignorancia este tipo de escenario es una de las características principales que le atribuyo a la novela negra. La otra es la imperfección de la naturaleza de sus personajes, también presente en Diablos de Polvo con la excepción de un único personaje que consigue mantenerse incorrupto. Por otro lado, y aunque cuando escribo siempre intento mantener las formas, no puedo dejar de mencionar que en Diablos de Polvo reside uno  de los mayores HIJOS DE PUTA que ha parido pluma de escritor. El infame Inja Mazibuko, señor de la guerra capaz de suscitar mis peores cualidades y mi deseo ardiente de desearle todo mal y para quien cualquier sufrimiento es poco. Me reservo la opinión de si la novela da o no satisfacción a dicho deseo. En el otro extremo del espectro se encuentra Sunday, una chica zulú de dieciséis años que se resiste al destino injusto que las circunstancias tratan de imponerle. Entre ambos transitan por rutas más o menos paralelas Robert Dell (antiguo activista antiapartheid cuyo pacifismo será puesto a prueba por las circunstancias), su padre (ex-agente de la CIA) y Disaster Zondi (zulú procedente del pueblo de Inja que ha escapado de la pobreza y ha alcanzado el éxito social y económico en Ciudad del Cabo haciéndose cargo de una unidad anti-corrupción). Todos ellos son personajes bien caracterizados, aunque confieso que Disaster Zondi (y la parte de la trama vinculada a él) me convence menos que el resto, tanto por su falta de rumbo como por su construcción un poco deslavazada. Entre todos dan pie a una coreografía trágica perversamente hipnótica que se refleja en la estructura de la novela.

Roger Smith es un buen narrador. La historia tiene un ritmo trepidante, lo que le da más mérito a su capacidad para dotar de tridimensionalidad el contexto y la situación del país. Solo en su tramo final, tal vez por desensibilización del lector, pierde algo de energía. Como tantas historias más o menos enraizadas en un género concreto la necesidad de encauzar las desventuras de los protagonistas hacia una situación final previsible, en su naturaleza sino en su desenlace definitivo (que los personajes se encontrarán está fuera de toda duda. Qué sucederá entonces es otro cantar), lastra un poco el realismo que caracteriza al conjunto del libro. A pesar de ello, Roger Smith es un buen malabarista de escenas y es difícil resistirse al atractivo de su novela. Nada es gratuíto pero la apariencia de espontaneidad se mantiene, o al menos la capacidad de sorpresa, por lo que la lectura siempre es un goce.

Me ha parecido una muy buena novela, llena de virtudes y con pocos problemas. No tengo ninguna duda de que los aficionados a la novela negra y al thriller se enamorarán inmediatamente de ella, pero es recomendable para cualquier buen lector a quién no le moleste la inclusión de la violencia en las historias que lee. Su retrato, no se si exagerado o tristemente realista, de la situación en Sudáfrica es descorazonador pero le da una personalidad propia que aumenta su interés. Es una novela de lectura sencilla pero oculta joyas para aquellos que disfrutan cavando en los textos. Recomiendo leerla prestando atención al detalle. Le caen 5 de las 5 estrellas posibles de Goodreads.
Profile Image for Ed.
Author 68 books2,711 followers
December 30, 2011
For my money, the top echelon of literary crime noir creates separate narrative threads of the main characters and then, somehow, weaves them together into one volatile, propulsive story. Roger Smith does just that and with seamless ease. I enjoyed reading his Mixed Blood earlier this year, and I consider Dust Devils even a notch better. The antihero, Robert Dell, South African journalist, finds his family killed, and reacts with fiery red in his eyes. His seeking revenge and justice feels right and fair. The hardboiled prose, relentless drive, and gritty details of the South African culture, both white and black, are what stand out for me here. This is an entertaining read throughout.
Profile Image for Jason Bradley.
1,096 reviews316 followers
February 9, 2014
(New Pulp Press offered me a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest review)

In this story, the author takes you on a twisting, turning jaunt that not only introduces you to some of the most interesting, fully fleshed-out characters I have ever read, but also keeps your heart racing for the entire read. This is one read you will never forget.

Amazing!
Profile Image for Jordi Via.
162 reviews45 followers
May 8, 2012
A pesar de la extrema violencia que recorre cada capítulo de Diablos de Polvo, a pesar de que se hace imposible coger cariño a los personajes, a pesar de que uno no comprende la frialdad e indolencia de todos los que aparecen en esta novela al enfrentarse a la muerte: la de sus vecinos, familiares… la de sus propios hijos… Pues, a pesar de los pesares, esta novela tiene algo que engancha, es adictiva; algo que no sé decir qué es pero que te lleva a leerla en apenas unas horas.
Profile Image for Don Bradshaw.
2,427 reviews105 followers
February 10, 2014
Set in the corrupt days after apartheid in South Africa, this is a story vividly spiced with native culture, modern thinking and the space between the two. The abject forced poverty and the utter disregard for human life made this story a tough one to read. The writing was flawless and kept the story moving well. The characters and their customs especially the Zulu, were well developed and three dimensional whether you liked them or not. I highly recommend this thriller.
Profile Image for Offuscatio.
163 reviews
June 15, 2012
Una novela con mucha garra, que primero te engancha, luego te tira a un agujero infernal, y después, poco a poco, empieza a perder su fiereza inicial y permite que te escapes más o menos ileso. En cualquier caso, es un texto que deja huella y que seguramente te perseguirá si algún día decides viajar a Sudáfrica.
Profile Image for Adribarefoot.
1 review3 followers
May 6, 2012
Flipante. Es un libro que deja huella. No se te va de la mente imágenes que has leído y vienen para atormentarnos. Cruelmente real y por ello doblemente cruel. Una historia fabulosa bien creada y creible. Todo en este libro es extremo, de un modo triste y brutal.
Profile Image for Marvin.
1,414 reviews5,409 followers
February 23, 2014
The violence piles up quickly in Roger Smith's action packed yet depressingly realistic thriller Dust Devils. Set in South Africa, it tells a story full of deception, corruption, murder, revenge and pretty much everything else you might find in a thriller. The author's strength is not just that he can handle all of this and keep you on the edge of your seat but that he can also transport you into the South African culture in a way that makes you feel you are there. At the end you may be glad you are not there.

South African journalist and pacifist Robert Dell is framed for the murder of his wife and son. At the same time, a powerful ex-warlord who is entrenched in the upper echelons of the Zulu nation is preparing for his marriage to his fourth wife, a young girl whose mother he killed. Dell is broken out of jail by his ex-CIA father who is the total opposite of everything Roger stands for. All of this comes together in a tale of revenge but one that is also a story of political corruption and cultural conflict.

Roger Smith has a talent for creating real life characters. They are not good or bad but just real. The Zulu villain is the only one that comes out as basically evil. The rest seems more like people caught up in a complex and corrupt environment. They have done terrible things but are trying to atone fr them in their very imperfect way. The story barrels through on all six cylinders and even when you think you know what is to happen, the author throws a little reality your way. Due to its foreign setting, it is hard for me to compare it to any other novel. Yet I feel there is some similarity to fellow thriller writer Jim Thompson's ability make the lurid and unthinkable believable. They also are similar in having a taut, frankly brutal style that manages to have its own poetic and literary charm. This is one of the most powerful thrillers I have read in a long time. Roger Smith is a writer who is deserving of a wider audience.

Four and a half stars.
Profile Image for Yossi.
110 reviews29 followers
June 16, 2012
Entretenida pero falla en la cohesión de hechos y es a veces muy forzada y evidente.
Profile Image for San Hernan.
341 reviews19 followers
June 28, 2020
Ahora mismo Sudáfrica y su historia me tienen cautivada y alarmada, el libro me ha gustado mucho por las referencias históricas, la historia policíaca que hay de trasfondo es un plus, para mí.

Llegas a empatizar muchísimo con todos los pesronajes y a odiar a los malos desde las vísceras.

5 reviews1 follower
October 15, 2014
I never write reviews, someone has always said what I want to say. This book won't be for everyone. It's violent, shocking, raw and confronting. A gripping story, but there's no happy ending. A reflection of African politics, culture and issues of that era. It won't be the last book I read from Roger Smith, but at least I'm prepared.
Profile Image for Rafa .
539 reviews34 followers
May 3, 2012
Apropiada para leer con un cubo de palomitas.
Profile Image for Julie .
4,250 reviews38k followers
February 10, 2014
Dust Devils by Roger Smith is a 2011 publication.
It's bad enough that Robert Dell, a white journalist in South Africa, has lost his family, but now he is being blamed for it. In order to hunt down the real killer, Robert must team up with his father. The thing is, he hates his father. The two have a few differences when it comes to politics. But, Robert is out of options by this time and has no choice but to join forces with his father.
The person behind Robert's frame up is set to marry his fourth wife, a young woman who saw him kill her family. That isn't the worst of it though, and Sunday is desperate to get out of the marriage.
All these events take place against the backdrop of South Africa where it is like two different worlds. The book is very political in nature and not just a thriller. There is a lot going on and I recommend the reader take the story nice and slow so you can digest all the the author is trying to tell you. This is harsh, highly violent novel but has a pulp fiction or noir slant that I hadn't expected. Actually, nothing about this book was as I expected. If you like thrillers but like the book to be about more than just murder and action you will like this one. There is a really smart edgy plot with all the weapons and shooting and testerone you could possibly ask for, but there is a lot here for those who like a thinking man's thriller.
Overall I will give this one an A.
Profile Image for Benoit Lelièvre.
Author 6 books188 followers
May 3, 2012
You have to understand two things to fully enjoy this novel. First, it's a very angry political novel, so the purpose is bigger than the story and you have to stop sometimes to let the horror seep in. Two, while Roger Smith is a decent writer, where he truly leaves everybody behind is as a storyteller. He will constantly mess with your expectations, but will articule a story of a spectacular scope without ever betraying your trust. Dust Devils is a noir novel as fine as anything ever written in the genre.
Profile Image for Ross Cumming.
737 reviews23 followers
July 18, 2012
Another great book from Roger Smith. Really enjoy his righting style, as it follows several plot narratives which you know are all going intersect at some point resulting in a stunning climax. Also like the South African setting as it gives a different perspective to the story as opposed to the more usual UK/USA locations, which are mostly quite familiar. Can't wait for the next novel from Smith.
Profile Image for David Bridges.
249 reviews16 followers
August 22, 2018
Perfectly executed noir novel right here. This is my first round with Roger Smith but will definitely not be my last. I don't know much about South Africa, but despite that, I totally felt like I was there. From the metro coasts to the scorching heat of a Zulu village, Smith has you right there with his characters.

The book clocks in at 302 pages but I have to admit that I blew through the book quickly. The storytelling is gripping and the characters are flawed yet believable. The narrative is conveyed in a series of short chapters, or mini-stories that lead you straight to a brutal climactic ending. There is plenty of violence, and it is extreme, but it is sprinkled with just enough heart that you can't help but care. Needless to say, I am impressed and can't wait to read more Roger Smith. Not much better than high-quality pulp noir.
35 reviews1 follower
August 3, 2021
The content is violent, perhaps more than comfortable for some. However it is always in the context of the story told and perhaps not unrealistically so. South Africa, where the novel is set, continuous to be a violent society.
To use a cliché, the book was hard to put down: the thrilling storyline and authenticity of the characters is engaging and immersing. The author has a way of describing with words that makes you (nearly) taste, smell and feel what is going on. The story does not avoid the ugliness, poverty and superstitions of life that some people suffer in the poor parts of South Africa, but rather starkly brings it forward.
If you want an intense thriller that takes you across some of the regions in South Africa, bringing insight into how some people live with violence in their daily lives, put this book on your list.
I will be reading more of Roger Smith's work.
Profile Image for Z.A. Coe.
Author 7 books1 follower
November 24, 2019
Dust Devils is bleak and gritty but apparently quite accurate in its portrayal of the setting. The book is very well written and Roger Smith has an exquisite command of language. I don't think I'll read more of his books because this was a bit too bleak for me, but for anyone who likes well-written action or thriller novels, Dust Devils is a good showcase of Smith's talent.
1 review
October 17, 2017
Good read

Exciting and setting captures your imagination. Cultural interplay was also rewarding. I would recommend this book without hesitation. Reminds me a little of Wibur Smith novels.
Profile Image for Jeremiah Dube.
22 reviews1 follower
December 12, 2019
Amazing. Thrilling all the way. Very stark and harsh writing, but it describes the reality of the crime context in which these poor people have to survive.

Very dark and violent and very exciting to read.
15 reviews
January 20, 2021
Very good. Violent and stark but very authentic. The characters are drawn in broad outline with little complexity but that works well for the kind of thriller we have here.

Sparse dialogue, and the action is dark and thrilling. Most enjoyable to read.
225 reviews2 followers
June 5, 2021
Dos tercios del libros son simplemente extraordinarios, un tercio final que desmerece el libro. Tiene mucha fuerza expresiva, rabia y mucha violencia. Un autor a seguir.
Profile Image for Diogenes.
1,339 reviews
December 31, 2022
Absorbing fast-paced thriller with interesting take on South African, Zulu and mixed race culture. The frequent callous and thoughtless killing is not easy to take.
Profile Image for Borja Pino Jambrina.
74 reviews5 followers
May 30, 2025
Impresionante...

Y, salvo que me ha dejado marcado para (espero) siempre, y que debe ser leído por cualquier amante del género 'negro', no diré nada más.

No hace falta.

Solo pasen y lean.
Profile Image for Elizabeth A..
320 reviews30 followers
July 27, 2011
A man who protested alongside black South Africans for the end of apartheid, freelance journalist Robert Dell is a devoted pacifist with a deeply ingrained sense of justice. When his wife and children are killed after a truck deliberately forces them off the road, Dell's grief turns into outrage when he is accused of being the one responsible for their deaths.

Initially placing his trust in the justice system to set things straight, Dell quickly realizes those responsible for the deaths of his family have connections in both the police force and court; he's being railroaded, and the only way he can prove his innocence is to bring down the real culprit. Not an easy task, and one with which Dell reluctantly accepts his father's help. Ironically, his father, Bobby Goodbread, was himself only recently released from prison, where he was serving time for his involvement with death squads under the apartheid government. Fortunately Goodbread is still connected to his old network, because the man he and Dell are after is big game.

Inja Mazibuko is both a corrupt police officer and a Zulu Chief. He also happens to be suffering from full-blown AIDS, a situation he intends to cure with a traditional remedy; marrying a young virgin. His intended, 16-year-old Sunday, wants nothing to do with the warlord but has little choice. Her shot at salvation comes in the form of Disaster Zondi (who also appeared in Smith's Mixed Blood), a former police officer who returns home in order to lay the demons of his criminal youth to rest. When Zondi inadvertently receives an invitation to the wedding he realizes he may actually know Sunday, and that under no circumstances can she be allowed to marry the vicious Mazibuko.

Author Roger Smith weaves the threads of these five individuals' lives into an intense, evocative, and ultimately stark tapestry. Though most are familiar with South Africa's apartheid past and its fall, few are probably aware of the current state of the country. Smith very adeptly uses the plights of the individual characters as embodiments of the challenges facing the country itself. The struggle for justice and redemption that Dell, Goodbread, and Zondi are wrestling with serves as a mirror for the country's struggle to find the same, while Mazibuko and Sunday are reflections of the dichotomy of the Zulu culture; one foot planted firmly in the past, the other striding toward a new, more enlightened future.

It's not often something so bleak can also be beautiful, but Smith paints such a vivid, realistic picture of the characters and their hopes and motivations that one can't help but appreciate and be overwhelmed by the desire for happiness they - and the country - are all striving to reach in their own ways. Smith's writing is a master class in how to create a novel that speaks to the reader on multiple levels, as well as how to infuse a work with a message without beating the reader over the head with it. Dust Devils is truly powerful writing.
Profile Image for Jirka Hiemer.
142 reviews15 followers
November 26, 2015
Robert Dell. Obyčejný, spíše průměrný, bílý novinář, žijící si svůj monotónní život po boku atraktivní manželky a dvou dětí. Člověk, kterému se během jediného dne převrátí celý život naruby, přijde o vše, co mu bylo milé, a je donucen sáhnout si až na dno temnoty skrývající se v každém z nás.

Bílí se stali černými a černí se stali bílými, bohatství a chudoba potkávající se s silně zakořeněným rasismem a všeprostupující korupcí, tak by mohla znít zjednodušená definice postapartheidní Jihoafrické republiky v jejíchž stísněných reáliích se příběh Roberta Della odehrává.

Na pozadí nového uspořádání státu žije Robert Dell svůj život, který nevybočuje z řady jemu podobných. Nejistotu z neuspokojených profesních ambicí a dysfunkčnosti manželství s úspěšnější manželkou, atraktivní mulatkou, ukončí zdánlivá dopravní nehoda, která Roberta Della připraví o vše jemu drahé.

Během několika málo dní se Dellovi převrátí život naruby. Po smrti blízkých vychází najevo dlouhotrvající nevěra manželky a Dell je na cestě do nejhoršího vězení JAR, kde ho čeká zaplacená smrt v podobě spoluvězňů. V poslední chvíli, způsobem sobě vlastním, vstupuje na scénu Dellův otec, legenda apartheidu, bývalý agent CIA a vládní zabiják, Bobby Goodbread.

Příběh Prašných vírů není složitý, od prvních stránek je čtenáři jasné, kudy se bude děj knihy ubírat. Ale to Prašným vírům neubírá na atraktivitě, právě naopak.

Pozadí přitažlivé Jihoafrické republiky, zajímavě rozvržené charaktery postav, které, snad krom jediné, nejsou jednoznačně černobílé, a syrově popisovaná realita života čtenáře ke knize doslova přikovají a lákají číst dál.

Autor se nevyhýbá násilí, střelba, zabíjení, znásilňování i umírání dětí jsou zde na denním pořádku. A tomu všemu vévodí asi jedna z nejzápornějších postav, kterou můžete v literárním světě potkat.

Hrdinové, či antihrdinové knihy, nejsou žádní supermani, jsou zranitelní, mají své pochyby, slabosti a jsou smrtelní. Vedle nich se v Prašných vírech objevuje řada více či méně zajímavých vedlejších postav, jejichž načrtnuté příběhové linie by vydaly za mnoho dalších kapitol v knize.

Prašné víry jsou syrová kniha, rychlá k přečtení a plná surového násilí. Kniha, která vás svou atmosférou vezme na drsný výlet do dřívějších časů JAR a nedá vám vydechnout do poslední stránky depresivního příběhu.
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