By Julia Keller; reviewed by Jeannette Hartman
On an ordinary Saturday morning in Acker’s Gap, a man walks into the Salty Dawg restaurant and fires three shots. He kills three old men having coffee together.
“Yes, the bright shouts of color that came in the form of dying leaves—the crazy reds and headlong yellows and rich liquid browns—were gorgeous to behold. . . And the mountain had its own grave, austere loveliness. But all of that natural beauty was undercut by the plight of the human beings forced to live in the midst of it. By the persistent poverty. By the squalid shacks that showed up in empty spots in the woods. By the roadside stands hawking hubcaps and homemade pies and trail bologna and plaster lawn ornaments, from birdbaths to praying angels. By the boarded-up entrances to the used-up mines, mines that had meant mortal danger and dire health risks—and good-paying jobs, jobs that would never come back.”
Keller has created a challenging mystery that hinges on her diverse characters’ needs, drives and circumstances. This mystery has dark elements, but it isn’t noir or hopeless. The fascinating setting, interesting characters and suspenseful story will keep you turning pages.
I found the identity of the ultimate culprit hard to believe. I also dissatisfied with the fact that Carla Elkins, raised by an attorney, didn’t come forward with information about the shooter in the cafe when she recognized him. Yes, she’s a teenager, and yes, she’d risk getting trouble with her mother. But, really? Watching three old men get killed in front of you isn’t enough to knock you out of your self-absorption and do the right thing?
One final thing didn’t work for me. It opens with a horrific scene in which the trailer where Bell and her older sister live goes up in flames with their drunken father inside. It’s a haunting scene that explains a lot about Bell’s past and commitment to her hometown and the law.
Her sister is imprisoned and refuses all contact with her. But then it seems to just drop. Maybe it gets referred to in future books, but I found it more grabbing than most of this book and was disappointed not to learn more.
- BITTER RIVER (2013)
- SUMMER OF THE DEAD (2014)
- LAST RAGGED BREATH (2015)
- SORROW ROAD (2016)
- FAST FALLS THE NIGHT (2017)
- BONE ON BONE (2018)
- THE COLD WAY HOME (2019)
Other stories like this include THE RANGER.
About the Author: Julia Keller
As a journalist, Julia Keller won the Pulitzer Prize for feature writing for her three-part account of a deadly tornado outbreak in Utica, IL, in 2004. A native of Huntington, West Virginia, her father was a math professor at Marshall University.