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Anything You Say Can and Will Be Used Against You: Stories Kindle Edition

4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 34 ratings

This riveting debut collection of short fiction about women cops comes from the author's real–life experience as a Baton Rouge police officer. In an entirely fresh and unique voice, these stories reveal the humanity, compassion, humour, tragedy and redemption hidden behind the "blue wall."

Anything You Say Can and Will Be Used Against You centres on the lives of five female police officers. Each woman's story–like each call in a police officer's day–varies in its unique drama, but all the tales illuminate the tenuous line between life and death, violence and control, despair and salvation. Because the stories come from the author's own experience, they open a curtain on the truth behind the job–how officers are trained to deal with the smell of death, how violence clings to a crime scene long after the crime is committed, how the police determine when to engage in or diffuse violence, why some people make it from the academy to the force and some don't, and all the friendships, romances, and dramas that happen along the way. It illuminates not only how officers feel while they are in uniform, holding their guns, but also what they feel after they go home and put those guns aside.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Combining Southern grace and urban brutality, ex-cop Drummond debuts with 10 short stories grouped into five blistering fictional portraits of Baton Rouge policewomen. Each lady is tough even without her bulletproof vest, and all are plagued by death and corruption as they undertake the bracing, dehumanizing enforcement of justice. In the three "Katherine" stories, the protagonist relates in her own dispassionate voice how she fired two shots into a robbery suspect's chest and then massaged his heart through the gaping bullet wound. She possesses a keen talent for detecting danger and the gruesome gift of determining cause and time of death-a few hours, a day, a week-from the first pungent whiffs of a corpse. In "Liz," a haunted traffic officer recuperates from a car accident, dredging up grisly memories from her days on the force; in "Mona," the burned-out protagonist struggles not to lose control in her professional and personal life. On her first day at work in Victim Services, another policewoman ("Cathy") responds to a stabbing, the knife still sticking out of the woman's chest when she arrives. Years later, after Cathy has married one of the investigators, the victim returns to ask her to reopen the case, accusing Cathy's husband of misconducting the investigation. And in "Sarah," the protagonist escapes to New Mexico from the moral morass she lands in when a group of policewomen take justice into their own hands in a Louisiana swamp. Choosing original characters over cliches and gritty detail over simplification, Drummond continually surprises with her profiles in courage, which focus on a captivating minority on the force.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

“Unforgettable, beautifully written stories.”

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0018ND884
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ HarperCollins e-books (July 1, 2008)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ July 1, 2008
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 1128 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 282 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 34 ratings

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Laurie Lynn Drummond
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Customer reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
4.7 out of 5
34 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on November 6, 2017
I loved it. I am the husband of Barbara (the account holder) and found it to be a gritty and appealing look inside the police officer's day. Utility belt bouncing painfully during a run that leaves the officer too breathless to call for backup--these well-written stories are the real deal. Or at least to me, an outsider, they seem to be.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 15, 2020
A fantastic book on crime and policing. Details are great and true.
Reviewed in the United States on October 19, 2014
I love it! I lived in Baton Rouge for a while and my neighbor was a wonderful lady named Laurie Drummond. I guess I would be a little prejudiced, except, it really is very good.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 10, 2009
Since I'm retired from the Police Dept., Laurie Drummond's stories held a special interest for me. It's fun to try to recognize some of the people and events that you had been a part of, in the not so distant past.
Reviewed in the United States on May 11, 2017
This is "can't put it down" kind of read. HIGHLY recommend it!
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Reviewed in the United States on April 19, 2021
“Anything You Say Can and Will Be Used Against You” is a short story collection written by Laurie Lynn Drummond which chronicles the tales of five female police officers working in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Considering the author’s history as a former police officer, it is unsurprising that the stories in this collection feel very intense and real, ranging from somewhat comical interactions between characters to gut-wrenching depictions of crime scenes. With its vivid descriptions of policework and realistic characters, “Anything You Say Can and Will Be Used Against You” immerses the reader into a world not many have known and helps them understand people who are part of that world a bit more.

Many of the short stories in this collection introduce a strong theme in the beginning that surrounds the story. One of the best examples of this is “Katherine’s Elegy”, which focuses on the theme of “legends”. The story starts off describing the legend of a female police officer named Katherine, but then proceeds to become a story of a group of rookie cops learning how to do their job, with the theme introduced in the beginning seemingly absent. However, the way the story ends leads to the characters doing a reevaluation of Katherine’s legend along with the concept legends as a whole. This is one of the longer stories in the collection with a lot of events taking place, so it is likely the reader will have forgotten the story was about legends by the time the theme is brought back at the end to tie everything together, which makes for a surprising and gratifying conclusion to the story. Unfortunately not all stories in this collection contain strong theming like this, such as “Keeping the Dead Alive” which is a relatively straightforward sequence of events, but the stories that do are some of the best in the collection.

One of the ways this collection helps the reader understand the world of policework more is through its sensual descriptions, and no story exemplifies this better than “Taste, Touch, Sight, Sound, Smell”. While all of the stories in this collection contain great descriptions of what’s going on in the story, this one is especially vivid due to it surrounding a theme of the five senses. “Sometimes there is the acrid cutting edge of gunpowder that bites the eyes, the nostrils, the throat. Violence has a heavy smell that lingers for days – a taste as well – and a presence, thick and gray and swirling.” With this description, the reader can really imagine and even feel the overwhelming sensations that surround a dead body. This whole story is filled with quotes like this, and it really helps the reader be fully immersed in the scenes taking placed, even carrying over into other stories and affecting how the reader perceives similar scenarios.

The stories in this collection also help the reader understand the world of policework through its various characters, all of whom may react to their job in different ways. A good example of this is “Keeping The Dead Alive”, a story involving a large group of female police officers and how they cope with constantly seeing death through their jobs. The main character of this story, Sarah, feels overwhelming emotions in response to death often, much stronger than the rest of the group, but she tries to ignore them to the best of her ability and focus only on the facts. Meanwhile, her friend Gwen doesn’t understand her feelings at all, as she is unable to remember the victims of crimes she deals with and instead only remembers the people that committed the crimes along with the anger she feels towards them. Gwen also ends up making a huge mistake in this story, and the reader gets to see her mindset in making the mistake and her panicked reaction to realizing what she had done. Seeing the mindset they have behind a lot of the bad or hard decisions they have to make, along with how they feel afterwards, helps connect with these characters a lot.

“If I could, I’d give them a story they might understand, one that doesn’t involve guns of course. Except I can’t, no matter how hard I try. There is nothing to compare it to.” In “Anything You Say Can and Will Be Used Against You”, Laurie Lynn Drummond uses her vivid writing and personal experiences to craft a collection of stories that helps people understand the world of policework, and it is absolutely worth reading.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 8, 2004
INTRODUCTION
Laurie Lynn Drummond's book from start to finish, draws you deep inside her characters. You feel the weight of the policewomen's tool belt and the subtle changes in behavior that quickly mold the rookie cop into the seasoned professional. She doesn't just capture the voice of the woman cop, but that of the human being that has chosen an at times very de-humanizing job. This job, will affect their perceptions outside as well, forever. They will never look on normal day to day life quite the same again.
BOOK IS IN 5 VERY UNIQUE VOICES:
The book is broken up in 5 very unique stories, with one woman police officer as the focus. Some are cops earlier in their careers, others are after they have become jaded and looking back. Others are focused on a single riveting situation. Each brings in a voice very human and very real. Unique too are some of the family relationships that provoked the officer to pursue this line of work.
The book is arranged in groups of stories.
KATIE:
The group of stories called Katherine, give you Katie Joubert's point of view. There are 3 stories where she tells you of the time she killed a man, her emphasis on training your senses to do the job, and the myth she became.
LIZ:
The second set of stories are about Liz, who is eventually no longer on the regular beat. Her story is not so much of one about policework, but of relationships.
MONA:
The third set is of Mona, a policewoman who has joined the force coming from the legacy of father who was a cop. Their relationship was not a good one and both this relationship and the hardness required from a job, are damaging her relationhips with her own family.
KATHY:
The forth set is of Kathy and her involvement in an unusual case over a long period of time. How first impressions can change and change again.
SARA:
The last set is about Sara, a woman whose involvement on a case became very personal and drove her to run away from all that is familiar, only to realize, it all comes with you.
ALL SO DIFFERENT, BUT EASY TO EMPATHIZE:
The author brings to life, the regimentation, the nerve racking tension and the at times visceral feelings many police officers face and puts it in terms any of us that have a routine can understand. Co-workers quirks, breaks, lousy coffee all are intimately painted in the character's palate of this very unique job.
IN SUMMARY:
I found this book hard to put down. It was well written and easy to read. Nice job, I'm hoping many more will follow.
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Top reviews from other countries

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藤枝涙岩
5.0 out of 5 stars 警察小説を超えるもの
Reviewed in Japan on April 29, 2006
 ルイジアナ州バトンルージュといえば日本人学生がハロインで誤って射殺された物騒な街として知られている。日本人の偏見どおりに暴力が横行するこの街で、主人公の女警官は、日本でいう婦人警官(交通違反の切符を切ったり、老人会で交通安全の講師を勤めたりする)とは全くイメージが異なり、防弾チョッキを着用して犯罪者と格闘し、場合によっては相手を射殺せざるを得ない羽目に陥る。だが、この物語は単なる暴力の描写ではなく、彼女らの心の動きを捉える。

 「Lemme Tell・・」という小品にもその苦悩が表現される。近所に住むベトナム戦争の退役軍人である中年男は、警察官の仕事の厳しさはよく理解していると口にする。離婚したばかりの女警官は、警察仕事への同情へ丁寧にお礼を言いながらも「あなたの想像しているのとは違う厳しさよ」と思う。しかし、彼はベトナムで、敵のベトコンではなく仲間のアメリカ人を射殺したことを告白する。「Lemmeは言うんだ。悪夢に悩まされているだろう、と。だが俺はちっとも後悔はしていないさ。」

 ぜひとも読むべき作品です。
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ferrari
5.0 out of 5 stars そして彼女は拳銃を磨く
Reviewed in Japan on August 26, 2006
犯罪多発のアメリカの南部の湿気と熱気と臭気に満ち満ちた街の片隅でトイレのつどつど邪魔になる拳銃やら手錠やら警棒やら防弾チョッキやら、その他警官としての身を守る多くの兵器を身にまとい今日も彼女たちはあるいは自分自身の命をも脅かす生々しい事件の場に、あるいはむごたらしく殺害された被害者の遺体の足元に本部からの呼びかけに応じて犬のようにかけつけます。それが仕事であり、彼女らの日常であることにいささかの疑問をはさむことは許されないのかあるいは本人達が「今そこにある危機」を見据えるためにあえて余所見することを拒否しているのか、この小説の幾つかのチャプターには答えではなく、そんな彼女たちへの疑問符の残らない疑問が残されています。小説自体は贅肉のない、それでいて多面体で構成された不思議なパズルのような作品です。あるいはこの小説の主人公達は女性でなくてもよかったのかもしれない、と思う反面、女性というジェンダーのみが持ちえる感覚、反応、行動が蒸し暑い南部の空気とは裏腹の乾いた文章の後ろに血がにじむようなレアな感覚を与えています。これは警察小説でもミステリーでもありません、一人一人の女性警官の寡黙な魂の記録といっていいでしょう。英語も読みやすくかつとても含蓄があります。特に女性の貴方に是非読んでいただきたい一冊です。
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