When the Killing's Done: A Novel

by T. C. Boyle

Hardcover, 2011

Call number

FIC BOY

Collection

Publication

Viking (2011), Edition: First Edition, 384 pages

Description

Traces an incrementally violent confrontation between a National Park Service biologist who would eradicate invasive wildlife on the Channel Islands and two locals who are fiercely opposed to the killing of any creatures.

Media reviews

If Boyle intended to suggest any ambiguity on whose path is wisest, he failed, but When The Killing’s Done nonetheless feels true to its characters and startlingly clear-eyed in its assessment of a tough environmental issue. The book’s strongest passages reveal a Werner Herzog-esque view of the
Show More
natural and unnatural world, from predatory ravens dive-bombing flocks of sheep to the blood sport of courtroom showdowns and organized sabotage. Ideals don’t survive in those arenas; it’s kill or be killed.
Show Less

User reviews

LibraryThing member skfurlotte
T.C. Boyle’s book When the Killing’s Done is a compelling work. The battle between Dave LaJoy leader of an animal rights group and Alma Boyd Takesue a biologist with the National Park Service over the fate of the plant and animal life on the Channel Islands off the California coast is vicious.
Show More
The sad fact is that this battle is also self-serving most of the time. The author has created a cast of characters that are, in most cases, unlikeable. The battle over the Park Service’s mandate to eradicate all plant and animal life that is not indigenous to the islands and Lajoy’s desire to protect all plant and animal life regardless of where it originated is the backdrop against which the action of the novel takes place. However, the most enjoyable parts of the novel are those which depict the people who have at various times made their homes on these islands. It is the human story that really is the heart of this novel.
Show Less
LibraryThing member TomCook.cff
reading because I am a sometime TC Boyle fan, I am intrigued to determine the right response to invasive species, and because I have always wanted to go to the Channel Islands off California. Also, nice reference to it in the most recent issue of The Nature Conservancy's magazine. First chapter,
Show More
set at sea, was very engaging.
Show Less
LibraryThing member booklove2
The Channel Islands, off the coast of California, miraculously saved Alma Boyd Takesue's pregnant grandmother in a shipwreck, and is also the focus of Alma's life as a conservationist with the National Park Service to protect the rare species that live on the islands. In order to save some animals,
Show More
she has to destroy the invasive species and not everyone is happy with that. Alternating chapters between Alma and Dave LaJoy, the animal rights activist at the fore-front trying to save any animal from being killed, throughout the first decade of this century, it becomes quite an eventful battle. It seems like many of Boyle's books contain characters fighting on opposite sides of an issue. He hints at the positives and negatives on each side, therefore there is never a chance to be preachy. He never chooses either side, he simply wants the reader to think.

I can see a lot of readers not liking this book because of the characters. Some readers need to really love and feel sympathetic to a character, in order to stick with a book. Many of Boyle's characters are usually naive, cynical, hypocritical, not very likable, but that is what I love about Boyle's writing. You wouldn't really have an interesting book with perfect characters anyway. Boyle doesn't need to be another writer with perfect characters, because his writing has everything else. I get the feeling that Boyle rarely even likes any of his characters. Not all of the events that occur seem to tie together. Some things seem to happen simply to torture the characters. But maybe that is the point. Dave is so busy with his vindictive mission to make Alma's life miserable (and there wasn't much of a back story for Dave to say why, though Alma's story goes back generations, and Dave's point of view does occupy half of the book, after all) that maybe it was never even about the animals at all. Maybe in the war of human vs. human, animals and everything else in the world get lost in the shuffle. But then again, animals don't play nice either, with an especially traumatic episode involving sheep that Dave's girlfriend Anise witnesses, while she is living on the islands as a teen.

The characters may have their flaws, but Boyle's writing does not. Boyle has an amazing, unique style. He uses a few words that require the use of a dictionary, words I've never seen before, but sometimes I just want to read a smart book. The prose is so alive, memorable and vivid, at times the book felt less like literature and more like life. Important things were said here. I'm convinced with Boyle's range of subjects, there is at least one book for everyone. This book contains elements of Boyle's other books. I was often reminded of A Friend of the Earth, East is East, Drop City, and The Tortilla Curtain while reading this one. Incidentally, these are all four of Boyle's books I've read, and all VERY recommendable. Especially The Tortilla Curtain (if any book should be required reading, it's this one). Boyle writes a mean short story as well. Visiting islands in the ocean, this was the perfect book to get away from all this New York snow. Keep those books coming, Mr. Boyle!
Show Less
LibraryThing member ufjunkie
Both Dr. Alma Takesue, who works for the National Park Service and David Lajoy, a strong-minded animal activist, want to save the wildlife on Santa Cruz island which lies off the coast of California. But they can't agree on how it should be done. Takesue favors exterminating the invasive species
Show More
(rats and wild boars) that are destroying the native inhabitants whereas Lajoy feels that all life, even those of rats, should be completely protected. And when their opposing ideas on the topic come into conflict, their emotions escalate until, finally, violence erupts.
T.C. Boyle, as always, expertly weaves several narratives together, creating a richly woven story in which two people who should be working for the same cause end up as bitter enemies. Boyle's depiction of the island is so vivid that the reader will want to hop the first ferry to Santa Cruz, but for all the description, the story is a page-turner.
When the Killing's Done is not only a gripping read, but a fascinating look into two characters who, despite their dedication to preserving life, don't really have much to live for. Both Takesue and Lajoy are miserable characters. Takesue, a humorless workaholic, is so gripped by worries over her carbon footprint that even brewing a cup of tea fills her with guilt. Lajoy, on the other hand, is so ego-centric and misanthropic that it's nearly impossible for the reader, or anyone else, to connect with him.
T.C. Boyle has written many wonderful novels, and When the Killing's Done does not disappoint. I highly recommend this book.
Show Less
LibraryThing member SalemAthenaeum
Opposing forces clash when the battle between Alma Boyd Takesue, a National Park Service biologist who is looking to eradicate foreign invasive animal species from the Channal Islands, and Dave LaJoy, a native animal rights activist who is against the death of any animals by human hands, comes to a
Show More
head through a series of escalating events. In trying to outdo the opposition, both parties flirt with the ideas of sabotage and experience the destructive power of nature itself.
Show Less
LibraryThing member PlankGeek
The book's well written, especially the biological information. Some of the character development is a little convenient, but overall I thought this was a good read. Anthony Heald did a very good job as narrator, bringing the characters to life.
LibraryThing member PamelaBarrett
For forty years I’ve driven past California’s Channel Islands, seeing them on a clear day is like glimpsing paradise, but I’ve never stepped foot on them. When I read in Sunset Magazine about T.C. Boyles new book—When the Killings Done—I had to buy it, just to travel to the islands
Show More
through his words, and he didn’t disappoint. The story centers on Alma Takesuke, a woman who is trying to restore the balance of the islands by eliminating non-native species—rats on Anacapa and pigs on Santa Cruz—who are decimating the native wildlife and plants. On the other side of this issue is Dave La Joy, a wealthy entrepreneur who doesn’t want the rats and pigs killed, and whose organization FPA (For the Protection of Animals) sets up protests, disruptions, media intrusions, lawsuits and anything he can throw at her to stop the slaughter.

Be prepared for the roller coaster of Boyle’s writing style. It’s a never-take-a-breath adventure that starts with a shipwreck or two or three and puts you on the edge waiting for the next disaster to hit. There is some crude language, a little sex, and a lot of historical content that he presents in non-boring way. All the characters seemed like people I know, and there are stories within stories that he pulls together like pieces of a puzzle. He also presents all sides of this debate in a way that’s not black or white. I read this on Kindle.
Show Less
LibraryThing member Sharon_T
T.C. Boyle is at his best in this dramatization of building back the endangered species to an island off California. Who gets to play God? Should people kill off animals in order to preserve the lives of other species? He is brilliant as he weaves character's lives, the sea, the island and the
Show More
animals into a tapestry of ever changing hues of what is right and what is wrong.
Show Less
LibraryThing member gmillar
An interesting plot line which deals with an ethical conundrum - but - I felt that the author used many more words than were necessary for the plot line he chose and I felt that the author is a person who is really pleased with himself. Of course that feeling could have been instilled by the
Show More
reader, and/or by the way it was read, but it was a strong impression for me. I haven't had such a strong feeling about an author before and I was quite disturbed by myself. I should now go and read another T. C. Boyle offering and see what that does for me.
Show Less
LibraryThing member scenik1
This novel is all strengths. Set in and around the Channel Islands off Santa Barbara, California, WHEN THE KILLING’S DONE exposes our very human hubris in the face of Nature’s unrelenting persistence and power. The antagonists, Alma Boyd Takesue and Dave LaJoy, each have a personal investment
Show More
in the fauna of Anacapa and Santa Cruz islands. Takesue is the spokesperson and figure head of the National Park Service and responsible for restoring the native habitat for the islands to head off the extinction of some of the most fragile and uniques species in the world. Dave LaJoy, an extremely hotheaded entrepreneur and recently “born again” animal rights advocate, will go to any extremes to prevent the suffering and killing of animals. The tension of their conflict builds to a very T.C. Boyle climax. The book jacket says the book offers no transparent answers, which is essentially true; but given the final outcome for one of the main characters, a certain bias hovers around the denouement. It is, nonetheless, very subtle and difficult to clarify solidly, and the power of Boyle’s writing prevails. As with TORTILLA CURTAIN, WHEN THE KILLING’S DONE deftly draws the reader first onboard one side of the issue, then the other; and always through the characters, neither of whom is completely sympathetic. If fact, LaJoy is thoroughly dislikable, but one cannot help seeing his point and even hoping for his success; until Boyle then introduces Takesue and we progress through her efforts, dreams and hopes and find ourselves on her side, rooting for her success and LaJoy’s downfall. The upshot is a revelation of the complexities of human stewardship of God’s creation, although Boyle overtly leaves God out of the story. Still, the verse from Genesis (1:28 “And God blessed them, and God said unto them, Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it: and have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth.”) that appears before the opening acknowledgments is carefully and powerfully predominant. The underlying message is, Life will have its way, whether through human intervention or some other way, and who is using whom? Our shipwrecks, our mishaps and our manipulations still amount to forward movement with losses and gains beyond our control, so it would appear that God’s blessing is given and is upon us, no matter what we do, and is not a directive so much as a given.
Show Less
LibraryThing member grheault
Lots of killing in this book, and the Santa Cruz Channel does a lot of it with assists from rocks, storms, and passing ships. It seems like everyone is drowning sometime or other. Reminiscent of Carl Hiaasen enviro-detective novels set in Florida, fun book with comic characters who seem to
Show More
specialize in doing themselves in. Particularly interesting, enjoyable if you know the area. The back and forth on ethics of interventions leads to a predictable seesaw stalemate. Attempts to recapture the past, it seems, are just that.

I am a fan of TC Boyle from way back, and thank him for keeping on writing.
Show Less
LibraryThing member peggygillman
Where was his editor?? Way too long and gets very stuck in detail that doesn’t move the story along. I listened to it otherwise I won’t have finished it. I didn’t like any of the characters but I hated the man who was trying to save the invasive species the most. Don’t think I’ll ever
Show More
read this author again. Life is too short. 5/17/12
Show Less
LibraryThing member librarianbryan
Boyle is obviously picking sides on this one much to determent of the novel's dramatic effect. And his writer's hand is much too evident in a lot of the plot. I expected more.

LibraryThing member mabroms
Entertaining read about a nearly believable rivalry between factions on the left fringe of the California environmental wars. I most enjoyed Boyle's style. The story-lines interweave like the waves in the sea that serve as the setting for much of the story. What I am left with most of all is how
Show More
much I miss Santa Barbara.
Show Less
LibraryThing member Sovranty
Who - or conversely, what - deserves to live and die? More importantly, who gets to make this decision? Again and again society asks this question. This story affords the reader a glimpse into the lives of those making the decisions and those subject to the decision. It is an interesting and
Show More
thought-provoking story that proves to be timeless.
Show Less
LibraryThing member CasaBooks
First book of Boyle's I've read. (others still on my bookshelf)
I liked it and will be certain to read more by him.
Read the other reviews for theme of the Islands, family, organizations, environment.
Definitely some 'food for thought' and an interesting ending.
Read in 2011.
LibraryThing member ChrisNorbury
I'd prefer to give it 3.5 stars because of the slow pace and anticlimactic ending, but Boyle's style and voice are impressive as he gets deep inside both the heroine's and the villain's psyches, which enriches the storyline and intensifies their interaction. A joy to read for the elegant prose, I
Show More
listened to the book as an audiobook and thought the reader did a masterful job when each character was thinking in an extended stream of consciousness mode.
Show Less
LibraryThing member TrgLlyLibrarian
What was most interesting about this book was the fact that the main characters were fierce enemies, yet could both be classified as "environmentalists." The differences in their views encouraged a lot of nuanced thought about issues of conservation.

Boyle is masterful at putting the reader inside
Show More
of the characters' minds. However, one soon discovers that it's not a pleasant place to be. The primary characters are so full of anger that the book really weighs on the mind.
Show Less
LibraryThing member EmScape
Alma is a conservationist working to save the native wildlife population of the islands of Anacapa and Santa Cruz from introduced species such as rats and wild pigs. Her nemesis is Dave LaFoy, who is an extreme animal rights activist. Alma is calm, scientific, and relatable as a character. Dave is
Show More
crass, borderline psychotic and irritating. Much back story is given regarding people related to these two, protagonist and antagonist, including the story of Alma's grandmother's shipwreck on Anacapa and Dave's girlfriend's childhood on Santa Cruz. The novel is long and almost boring in parts, and neither main character is a joy to be around for an extended period of time. The book covers quite a bit of time, too, and is rather slow-going. I gave up before reaching the end. Upon reading other reviews, it seems I'm not missing much.
Show Less
LibraryThing member cattriona
Says my husband: "The book's well written, especially the biological information. Some of the character development is a little convenient, but overall I thought this was a good read. Anthony Heald did a very good job as narrator, bringing the characters to life."
LibraryThing member nog
A return to form after some lackluster novels (my wife warned me away from The Women as not worth the time). He followed this up with The Harder They Come, which is not only even better, but topical too. And the companion novel to this one, San Miguel, which I still have to read, is supposed to be
Show More
very good also.
Show Less
LibraryThing member mkunruh
This was not my favorite Boyle. It is really well thought out, and his descriptions of Channel Islands is really very good, but I didn't buy it. Both Alma and David LeJoy (interesting that Alma's last name isn't as resonate) felt like straw dogs. He always has an agenda, but he usually gives his
Show More
characters more space -- more maybe he likes them better? Anyways, the opening scene with Alma's grandmother was spectacular, and I loved the sheep ranch bit with Rita but most of the time I was reading to finish it.
Show Less
LibraryThing member LGCullens
To me, this book was basically another example of humankind's ineptness in dealing with the natural world that sustains us, both in creating problems and attempting to solve them.

It is well written, pulling the reader into the story.

Awards

Dublin Literary Award (Longlist — 2013)

Pages

384

ISBN

0670022322 / 9780670022328
Page: 0.4533 seconds