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PICKARD COUNTY ATLAS by Chris Harding Thornton

PICKARD COUNTY ATLAS

by Chris Harding Thornton

Pub Date: Jan. 5th, 2021
ISBN: 978-0-3742-3125-5
Publisher: MCD/Farrar, Straus and Giroux

Buried secrets and more recent betrayals prompt conflict in this slow-burning crime novel.

Thornton’s novel chronicles the interwoven lives of several small-town Nebraska residents as they grapple with past trauma. The year is 1978, but a death that occurred years earlier provides the novel with its inciting incident. “Dell Junior, the oldest of three Reddick boys, was seven when he was killed by a farmhand named Rollie Asher,” Thornton writes. It’s something that’s led to plenty of trauma within the Reddick family, made even worse because the boy's body was never found. The novel opens with sheriff's deputy Harley Jensen encountering Dell Junior’s brother Paul and observing that “the only thing young about Paul was the age on his license.” Dell Senior decides to purchase a headstone for his long-dead son, but rather than provide closure to the family and the larger community, it exacerbates existing tensions. While this is a book in which illicit activity takes place with a law enforcement officer at its center, it’s a particularly measured variety of crime fiction—more concerned with the state of its characters’ souls than the legality (or lack thereof) of their actions. While it takes time to build momentum, the novel ultimately arrives at a heart-wrenching place. All the while, the characterization is helped by Thornton’s lean, lyrical prose: “Time stopped again. A pathetic breeze, not cool, lifted the air. He was still in there, still with no light.” The slow start can be frustrating, but the narrative payoff is eminently worthwhile.

At its best, a gripping meditation on betrayals new and old.