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Dark Ride: A Thriller Kindle Edition

4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 769 ratings

FINALIST FOR THE LA TIMES BOOK PRIZE!

From Lou Berney, the acclaimed, multi award-winning author of November Road and The Long and Faraway Gone, comes a Dark Ride

Sometimes the person you least expect is just the hero you need

Twenty-one-year-old Hardy “Hardly” Reed—good-natured, easygoing, usually stoned—is drifting through life. A minimum-wage scare actor at an amusement park, he avoids unnecessary effort and unrealistic ambitions. 

Then one day he notices two children, around six or seven, sitting all alone on a bench. Hardly checks if they’re okay and sees injuries on both children. Someone is hurting these kids.

He reports the incident to Child Protective Service.

That should be the end of it. After all, Hardly's not even good at looking out for himself so the last thing he wants to do is look out for anyone else. But he's haunted by the two kids, his heart breaking for them. And the more research he does the less he trusts that Child Protective Services —understaffed and overworked—will do anything about it.

That leaves…Hardly. He is probably the last person you’d ever want to count on. But those two kids have nobody else but him. Hardly has to do what's right and help them.

For the first time in his life, Hardly decides to fight for something. This might be the one point in his entire life, he realizes, that is the entire point of his life. He will help those kids.

At first, trying to gather evidence that will force the proper authorities to intervene, Hardly is a total disaster. Gradually, with assistance from unexpected allies, he develops investigative skills and discovers he’s smarter and more capable than he ever imagined.

But Hardly also discovers that the situation is more dangerous than he ever expected. The abusive father who has been hurting these children isn’t just a lawyer—he also runs a violent drug-dealing operation. The mother claims she wants to escape with the kids—but Hardly isn't sure he can trust her.

Faced with a different version of himself than he has ever known, Hardly refuses to give up. But his commitment to saving these kids from further harm might end up getting the kids, and Hardly himself, killed.


From the Publisher

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9780061766343 image 9780062115287 image 9780062292438 image 9780062663856 image 9780062663863 image
Gutshot Straight Whiplash River The Long and Faraway Gone November Road Dark Ride
Customer Reviews
4.2 out of 5 stars
1,291
4.2 out of 5 stars
913
4.1 out of 5 stars
4,995
4.3 out of 5 stars
3,864
4.2 out of 5 stars
769
Price $10.99 $10.99 $11.30 $20.60 $11.61

Editorial Reviews

Review

“The stoner thriller canon has a new candidate: Lou Berney’s Dark Ride…The author has a gift for creating characters and stories that infuse even the most sordid corner of humanity with unforced gentleness…This is the story of one man’s transformation from apathetic stoner to avenging angel…it also keeps the pages turning at a rapid clip. Berney’s thrillers have more weight than most, and more soul, and Dark Ride lives up to his established standards.”  — Los Angeles Times

“Stellar… Hardy is a memorable hero with an extremely satisfying arc, and Berney draws the supporting players with equal care, wringing pathos from their interplay as much as the heartbreaking premise. Few readers will finish this unmoved.”
Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"Dark Ride is Lou Berney at his best. This story of a disaffected scare actor at a theme park who finds his purpose in the defense of two abused children is both thrilling and heartbreaking but ultimately life affirming. The story of a man who finally stands for something after a lifetime of falling for anything will haunt you." — S.A. Cosby, New York Times bestselling author of Razorblade Tears and Blacktop Wasteland

"Dark Ride is a remarkable book written by Lou Berney, a storyteller I admire as a writer and cherish as a reader. Dark Ride effortlessly grabs you and does not let you go until the final page. I didn't want this book to end and it stayed with me long after I finished reading it. Lou Berney is a magnificent writer with talent to burn." — Don Winslow, New York Times bestselling author of The Cartel and City on Fire

“Poor Hardly Reed! There he is, just peacefully floating through life on a marijuana cloud, working in a rundown amusement park, when he encounters two kids he suspects are being abused. For once in his life he realizes he can’t stand by and do nothing. Obsession leads him down a heart-wrenching and twisting path, populated by a richly drawn cast of weird and lovable characters and dangerous scenarios. Dark Ride is moving, deeply involving, funny, breathless, and I loved every single page of Hardly’s harrowing journey from stoner to sleuth.”  — Lisa Unger, New York Times bestselling author of Last Girl Ghosted and Confessions on the 7:45

"Dark Ride is a brilliant book from a master storyteller. Sometimes the hero you need is the person you least expect and Berney's novel takes you on a remarkable journey where you witness an unlikely stoner become the hero two children in trouble need."  — T.J. Newman, New York Times bestselling author of Falling

"I've been a Lou Berney fan for years, and Dark Ride is a cause for celebration. A suspense novel shot through with heart and soul, it has the feel of an instant classic. Through the journey of Hardly Reed, a lovable pothead turned amateur detective, Berney wrestles with a central existential question: what do we owe our neighbors, and what are we willing to give up to help them?” — Steph Cha, bestselling author of Our House Will Pay, winner of the Los Angeles Times Book Prize 

"Dark Ride is a wild, funny, intense, charming, brilliantly written thriller that I couldn’t have loved more. From page one to the stunning end, I was under its spell. (If you don’t love this book, give me a call so I can tell you what a moron you are.)” — Lisa Lutz, New York Times bestselling author of The Spellman Files the Passenger 

Dark Ride is quite simply dynamite. Lou Berney lights the fuse on the first page and from there, the suspense builds to an utterly explosive climax. Berney offers an endearing and quirky cast of characters, not the least of which is Hardly, the most unusual and likeable protagonist to come along in a great while. This is a story that grabs you by the throat, then reaches deep into your heart. It’s a dark ride, yes, but one well worth the trip.” — William Kent Krueger, New York Times bestselling author of The River We Remember

“Lou Berney is such a talent, and he’s at the top of his game here. Hardly Reed is a protagonist to root for—an affable stoner who just might be the one person who can save two children in danger. Dark Ride will grab your heart in chapter one and not let go until the final, searing page.”  — Alafair Burke, New York Times bestselling author of Find Me

"Put your to-be-read pile to the side. A new book from Lou Berney should go to the top of your agenda." — Lori Rader-Day, award-winning author of The Death of Us

"Berney’s pitch-perfect portrait of the mellowest of dudes on a hero’s journey is both hilarious and terrifying.” — AirMail (12 Best Mystery Books of 2023)

“Only Lou Berney could create Hardly, one of the most endearing characters in recent memory. Writing in his Hardly’s guileless, hilariously dude-ish narrative voice, Berney is incapable of producing a wrong or unnecessary sentence.” — Air Mail

“An insightful look at being an adult, taking responsibility and discovering your inner power.” — South Florida Sun Sentinel

“Hardly’s trajectory is helped by Berney’s superb writing; sometimes self-consciously noir…, sometimes just colorful…, it adds both gravity and grace to the protagonist’s stubborn, self-destructive path. The whole novel is worth it for the poignant beauty of the final paragraph.” — Kirkus

"[Berney] introduces readers to an immediately unforgettable character: Hardly Reed... Berney brings a compelling human touch to a astory that grabs hold of the reader early and never lets go." — CrimeReads (The Most Anticipated Crime Fiction of Summer 2023)

"Occasionally I’ll read a new book that is so exciting, engaging and beautifully conceived that I cannot wait to write about it and share my latest discovery with readers everywhere. … I just found a novel that is so incredible I wanted to tell you about it. The book is Dark Ride by Lou Berney. … so inspiring, thrilling, and exhilarating, I could not put this book down, devouring it in one sitting.”
Dayton Daily News

“Dark Ride proves to be one of the most engaging books of the year. Lou Berney gives us a protagonist we root for not only to save the day but to improve his life. The storytelling is crisp and clear with deft, nuanced touches that give it a grounded quality." — The Hard Word

"[An] original take of the familiar story... delightfully fresh." — Booklist

"The author of the multi-award-winning November Road introduces an unlikely antihero in an unusual story with an ambiguous ending. For fans of noir crime fiction." — Library Journal

"Remarkable.... Lou Berney’s artistry as a writer hits you in the heart and tugs hard at your soul. This tense and riveting thriller unfolds in the shadow of the assassination of JFK and is a deeply moving love story about people caught in moral dilemmas for which there are no easy answers and who together find hope against all odds. It will stay with you long after you read the final page.... Berney is a writer to be read and admired. This is a staggeringly brilliant book and a flat-out terrific read.” — Don Winslow, New York Times bestselling author, on November Road

“I am really enjoying a down-and-dirty thriller, November Road by Lou Berney. Cold, violent, and clever. You might enjoy it too.” — R. L. Stine on November Road

“Nothing less than an instant American classic. Haunting, thrilling—and indelible as a scar.” — A. J. Finn, #1 New York Times bestselling author, on November Road

“When people say they want to read a really good novel, the kind you just can’t put down, this is the kind of book they mean. Exceptional.” — Stephen King on November Road

“Berney’s emotional, empathic writing keeps the dynamic between these two lost souls intriguing, and it resonates on a larger scale, placed as it is against such a vivid backdrop. In the tradition of great historical fiction, Berney finds within an exhaustively covered setting his own nooks and crannies. Do we need a conspiracy plot to keep this very human story humming? Probably not. But Berney’s a skilled dramatist too, and there’s no complaint from this reader on his keeping the pages turning.” — Entertainment Weekly on November Road

This superior novel from Edgar winner Lou Berney melds crime fiction with a tale about people reinventing themselves, played out during a cross-country automobile trip.… An emotional story about the power of love and redemption through sacrifice with the backdrop of a crucial historical moment.”? — Associated Press on November Road

“Berney’s gentle, descriptive writing brilliantly reflects these times of both disillusionment and hope.... As the title suggests, there is an autumnal, melancholic sense of loss at the heart of the novel, yet still, the loss is not destructive or debilitating. It is the kind of loss that gives way to a new world order. Perfectly captures these few weeks at the end of 1963—all that was lost and all that lay tantalizingly and inevitably just beyond the horizon.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review) on November Road

“Wistful and complex, Berney’s confident portrait of a roadside America traumatized by Kennedy’s death gives the novel literary heft, while the ticking clock of the mob closing in on the family to settle accounts lends a genre bite." — Library Journal (starred review) on November Road

“Berney creates nail-biting suspense by placing Marcello’s top hit man on Guidry’s trail, the book’s power derives from Charlotte, who finds hidden strength as she confronts unexpected challenges. This is much more than just another conspiracy thriller.”    — Publishers Weekly (starred review) on November Road

“Berney bends his notes exquisitely, playing with the melody, building his marvelously rich characters while making us commit completely to the love story, even though we hear the melancholy refrain and see the noir cloud lurking in the sky. Pitch-perfect fiction.” — Booklist (starred review) on November Road

“A fast-paced, sexy novel, packed with spine-tingling intrigue and money-induced lust...Excellent.” — Times Record News (Wichita Falls, Texas) on Gutshot Straight

“A fast-paced, sexy novel, packed with spine-tingling intrigue and money-induced lust...Excellent.” — Abraham Rodriguez, 2009 Dashiell Hammett Award finalist and author of South by South Bronx on Gutshot Straight

About the Author

Lou Berney is the multiple award-winning author of Dark Ride, November Road, and The Long and Faraway Gone, as well as Gutshot Straight and Whiplash River. His short fiction has appeared in publications such as The New Yorker, Ploughshares, and the Pushcart Prize anthology. He lives in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and teaches in the MFA program at Oklahoma City University.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0BSV846LQ
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ William Morrow (September 19, 2023)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ September 19, 2023
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 2528 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 248 pages
  • Page numbers source ISBN ‏ : ‎ 0062663860
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 769 ratings

About the author

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Lou Berney
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I’m Lou Berney, and my most recent novel is DARK RIDE (September, 2023). S.A. Cosby calls it "thrilling and heartbreaking." Lisa Lutz says, "If you don’t love this book, give me a call so I can tell you what a moron you are." (I think she might be serious.)

I’m also the author of four other novels, including NOVEMBER ROAD and THE LONG AND FARAWAY GONE. Between the two of them, those books won the Edgar, Hammett, Anthony, Barry, Macavity, Steel Dagger, ALA, and Oklahoma Book awards. I have discovered that there are a lot of different ways to nervously stammer and stumble through an acceptance speech.

Between the ages of 12 and 19 I was fired from approximately nine different jobs, including newspaper delivery boy (dereliction of duty), apartment complex maintenance man (general incompetence), and photo darkroom attendant (dereliction of duty, general incompetence, inappropriate use of darkroom). Since the age of 19, I have not been fired from a job.

My wife and I travel whenever we can (and whenever we save up enough airline miles). We’ve been to Australia, Japan, Egypt, and Colombia. My favorite experience was in Rwanda, where we visited the mountain gorillas. The guides warned us to be careful because although the gorillas are gentle, they are “gorilla gentle.”

I love dogs. No, I really mean it. I LOVE dogs. I happen to live with the best dog in the world, a golden retriever who thinks he can control me with his mind. But the joke is on him, because every time he stares at me I just give him a treat and he goes away.

A (very) small sampling of my favorite writers, in no particular order: Kate Atkinson, Elmore Leonard, Kelly Link, Walter Mosley, Laura Lippman, Flannery O’Connor, Don Winslow, Megan Abbott, Viet Thanh Nguyen, Louise Erdrich, Stephen Harrigan, Ivy Pochoda, Lynda Barry (not to mention S.A. Cosby and Lisa Lutz).

Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
769 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the characters quirky without being cliches and hilarious. They also describe the plot as page-turningly good and brilliant, pushing the genre into a new, brilliant realm. However, some customers feel the book is brief.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

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19 customers mention "Plot"14 positive5 negative

Customers find the plot page-turning, compelling, and brilliant. They also say the hero's Quixotic quest is compelling and the villains are exceptionally villainous. Customers describe the book as an absolutely phenomenal thriller that pushes a genre into a new brilliant realm.

"...The characters are quirky without being cliches. The story evolves slowly but engagingly until the haunting conclusion." Read more

"...The characterizations and dialogue are superb. Our hero’s Quixotic quest is compelling. The villains are exceptionally villainous...." Read more

"...It was, in many ways, disappointing. I had to force myself to keep reading the first half...." Read more

"...It gave the story a meaningful dimension,not usually found in these type of books. Highly recommend." Read more

12 customers mention "Characters"12 positive0 negative

Customers find the characters quirky, likeable, and engaging. They also say the humor is effective.

"...The characters are quirky without being cliches. The story evolves slowly but engagingly until the haunting conclusion." Read more

"...Our hero’s Quixotic quest is compelling. The villains are exceptionally villainous. I found myself drawn into the whole unlikely quest...." Read more

"...This is such a well written book with some unusual but totally convincing characters...." Read more

"...Hardly is very funny in a non-performative, self-effacing way...." Read more

3 customers mention "Story"3 positive0 negative

Customers find the story engaging, well worth reading, and worth losing a night's sleep.

"...Mr. Berney’s novels are stand alones. They are wellwell worth reading.." Read more

"...Worth losing a night’s sleep." Read more

"Loved this book. His characters are very “fundamentally likeable” and engaging, his humor so effective...." Read more

3 customers mention "Length"0 positive3 negative

Customers find the book brief, hackneyed, and irritating. They also say the ending is infuriating.

"...This is not the case for several reasons. First, the book is brief (approximately 1/3 shorter than your average crime novel) and character..." Read more

"...In this case, I’m sorry I did, because while the book itself is somewhat irritating, the ending is infuriating...." Read more

"...n't save this, but Berney continued, and Preston in spite of how hackneyed a read this turned out to be...." Read more

A story about a young man desperate to help some kids
4 out of 5 stars

A story about a young man desperate to help some kids

Dark Ride by Lou Berney is about a young man desperate to make a difference for two kids."Hardly is a young man drifting through life. His real name is Hardy but his brother called him Hardly because of how little effort he gives anything. Hardly is also a stoner working in a run down amusement park and spending his off time playing video games with his stoner friends.On a visit to court to take care of a parking ticket, Hardly sees two kids sitting alone on a bench in the hall. It looks like they've been burned but before he can get security's attention a woman rushes them out. Hardly makes it his mission to find them and help them but he finds out that some people are willing to hurt anyone."This is almost a coming-of-age story. Hardly sees these kids in apparent danger and it wakes up something in him. He wants more than this stoner lifestyle he's living. He stumbles around figuring things out and surprises those close to him. With everything that happens, including a severe beating, he still does what he can to help the kids.Berney makes us ask ourselves - "What would we do in that situation?" The ending is explosive and wild and unexpected. Great new story from Berney.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on May 18, 2024
Lou Berney creates the most unlikely hero and does it with style. The characters are quirky without being cliches. The story evolves slowly but engagingly until the haunting conclusion.
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on May 29, 2024
I’ve read and thoroughly enjoyed each of Lou Berney’s books.
This is the story of an amusement park employee who is living a directionless, frequently stoned life. . Our protagonist, Nicknamed Hardly, has just visited a municipal motor vehicle center to get a parking ticket payment extension. He observes two very young children sitting on a bench outside a municipal government office. The children have an odd affect. He speaks to them. He notices what appear to be partially concealed cigarette burn scars on both children. Their mother appears from within the government office, vehemently denies that there are any problems, covers up the burn scars by adjusting the children’s clothing, and quickly leaves. Our protagonist, shaped by childhood trauma and good but not great foster care, tries to identify the mother and children with an assist from a young, female, Goth attired government clerk. He learns the mother’s name, makes a report, and is met with indifference and/or helplessness from the Protective Services employees who are faced with staggering case load and appalling working conditions.
Hardly determines to act. He enlists the very eccentric female clerk, an intellectually challenged teenage aged. co-worker, a very attractive forty something Black female former private detective… now a realtor, his landlord (either a stolen valor wannabe or a former Navy SEAL), and his foster care “ brother,” a frustrated urban planner. He determines to rescue the abused children and their mother. The quest, with neither resources nor official help seems hopeless. Hardly persists leading us to an extremely moving climax.
Somehow, Berney makes all of this work. The characterizations and dialogue are superb. Our hero’s Quixotic quest is compelling. The villains are exceptionally villainous. I found myself drawn into the whole unlikely quest. Hardly is determined to do what is right. The others try to dissuade him but are drawn to him because of his integrity and determination.
The whole thing comes together very nicely. I don’t want this review to be a spoiler. So I’ll stop here
It’s just an excellent book. I found myself drawn to the characters and their mission. I strongly recommend the book.
Mr. Berney’s novels are stand alones. They are wellwell worth reading.

.
Reviewed in the United States on August 25, 2024
I read this book almost straight through, only stopping when I fell asleep and my kindle fell from my hand! Sad ending but I still really enjoyed this.
Reviewed in the United States on October 19, 2023
I will be submitting a minority report on DARK RIDE, even though I am a great fan of Lou Berney’s writing. This is essentially a redemption tale. The protagonist is a pot-smoker who plays a role at a kooky old west amusement park. His life is going nowhere. Suddenly he sees two children who have cigarette burns on their bodies and he decides to attempt to free them from the lives of abuse to which they have been subjected. The resulting sequence of actions will, indeed, give his life purpose and meaning and turn him into a mensch. That is all well and good and we all love a good redemption story, but the array of jacket blurbs here from top crime writers suggests that this redemption story will be better than those in the synoptic gospels.

This is not the case for several reasons. First, the book is brief (approximately 1/3 shorter than your average crime novel) and character development is perforce sacrificed. An annoyance for me (who ranks setting highly among novelistic elements) is that the book has no announced setting. The city is largeish; it has a Cheesecake Factory and it is a 14-hour drive from Phoenix. That could make it LB’s true life home town, Oklahoma City, but the actual location remains undisclosed. The rhythms of the novel are unsatisfying; the first half is very, very slow and the second half moves too rapidly. This is particularly problematic for me, because I found the ending unsatisfying. The pile-driver narrative takes you someplace you really don’t want to go. It is plausible, certainly, and it could be defended on logical grounds, but art is not always about logic. Dryden compares literary art to large statues in town squares. The statues are larger than life so that we can see them—from our perspective point—more clearly.

I will continue to read LB’s fiction, but this was not, for me, his triumph. It was, in many ways, disappointing. I had to force myself to keep reading the first half. I couldn’t put down the second half until the end, when I threw up my hands.
11 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on May 23, 2024
I liked how the main character found purpose in his life after deciding to make a difference in someone else’s life. It gave the story a meaningful dimension,not usually found in these type of books. Highly recommend.
Reviewed in the United States on May 8, 2024
What can I say? Seldom have I read a book with so unlikely a hero as Hardly Reed. This is such a well written book with some unusual but totally convincing characters. I've read Berney's "The Long Ago and Far Away Gone," but in my opinion this is even better. I hope this will go down as one of Berney's best works.
Reviewed in the United States on June 9, 2024
I almost didn’t buy this book. I mean, the protagonist Hardly Reed is a dope smoking, low gumption loser. It isn’t just that he smokes pot, he’s almost always stoned, even when he goes to work. But after reading the free sample I decided that showing up for that job stoned isn’t such a bad idea. And he really isn’t a bad guy, never has ill intentions. He won me over when recognizing that two children were in dire straits and decided to do something about it. It’s when the somewhat aimless boy becomes a man.

Top reviews from other countries

Mirovsky
5.0 out of 5 stars A good 'Slacker stoner tries to do the right thing' yarn
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 11, 2024
As a reader of all Berney's previous novels, I immediately felt comfortable with his latest book. Whilst in some ways it perhaps isn't as strong as November Road or Gutshot Straight, Berney still weaves a great story of second chances, dealing with bureaucracy, trying to do the right thing, all whilst being completely stoned. The book is filled with rich dialogue and characters, and delves into the most sordid corners of humanity at which Berney excels. A quick, but rich read, and a masterful ending.
Andwoo
3.0 out of 5 stars Was OK but not his best
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 3, 2024
I have read all the Lou Berney books. November Road and Long and Faraway Gone are fantastic. This book whilst reasonably enjoyable and easy to read is really not a patch on those. I kept thinking that something different would happen in the story or it would take an interesting twist. It just seemed to keep going to a fairly obvious ending. Hopefully the next one is a return to top form
2 people found this helpful
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