Next book

THE RESURRECTIONISTS

Fast, witty, and fun: highly entertaining but also highly forgettable.

A fortune-hunting scoundrel helps solve a murder case, in a picaresque thriller from Irish writer Collins (The Keepers of Truth, not reviewed, etc.).

Frank Cassidy is not the most sentimental guy in the world, so when he learns that his uncle Ward has been murdered, his first thought is the inheritance: Frank had gone to live with Ward’s family as a boy after his own parents died in a house fire, and now he figures he can claim a chunk of Ward’s farm. On Michigan’s remote Upper Peninsula, the farm is now being run by Frank’s cousin Norman, who naturally refuses to send Frank money to come out from New Jersey to dispute his claim to the estate. But that’s not enough to stop Frank, who proceeds to make the trip (in the company of his wife Honey, stepson Robert Lee, and son Ernie) in a succession of stolen cars, eating food pilfered from rest-stop vending machines. In Michigan, Frank is astonished to learn that Ward’s suspected murderer is believed to be Chester Green, a boyhood friend from a neighboring farm who was thought to have died years ago. But the question of identity is a tricky one: the suspect tried to hang himself in prison and is now sunk in a deep coma, and an exhumation shows Chester Green’s coffin to be empty. And there are more complications, involving “resurrectionists” (grave robbers) and the true fate of Frank’s father in that fire of so many years ago. Even poor, hapless Norman—a truly innocent-seeming man who wants nothing more than to keep the farm he grew up on for himself and his family—comes under police suspicion. Maybe a situation as duplicitous as this can be made sense of only by a sleazy, dishonest scumbag—like Frank. You have to send a thief to catch one, right?

Fast, witty, and fun: highly entertaining but also highly forgettable.

Pub Date: Oct. 1, 2002

ISBN: 0-7432-2904-5

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Scribner

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2002

Categories:
Next book

BLACKWOOD

A gleaming, dark masterpiece by one of Southern fiction's leading voices.

Still bearing psychological scars from his childhood, Colburn, a junkyard sculptor, confronts the traumatic past when he returns to his hometown of Red Bluff, Mississippi.

In 1956, when he was a boy, Colburn's unloving father hung himself—an act the son not only witnessed, but also abetted. Years later, when Colburn was a teenager, he learned from his mother that before his father's death, he had a baby brother who met a horrible fate due to his father's negligence—something that helped explain the suicide and made Colburn feel even more unwanted. In 1975, when Colburn returns to Red Bluff after years away, he is not the only lost soul drawing attention in the now-faded town. A disheveled man, woman, and boy living out of a dead Cadillac are committing strange and desperate acts that the veteran sheriff, Myer, can't begin to figure out. A married man who has obsessed over Celia, owner of the town bar, since grade school is pushed to the edge when she begins a complicated relationship with the taciturn Colburn—whose father, Colburn learns, consorted with Celia's fortunetelling mother. Unsettling, heartbreaking, and frequently astonishing, this Southern gothic never runs out of revelations. No mere metaphor in Smith's hands, the novel's ever present kudzu vines are a malevolent force, "strands of bondage" with the power to disappear people, cars, and entire houses, concealing ghostly caves and tunnels once dug by slaves. Such is the power of Smith's pitch-black poetic vision that the deeper you get into the book, the more entwined you are by its creeping effects. "It's like when something moves in the dark," says Myer. "You can't see it but you know it's there. I wonder if that's where we are."

A gleaming, dark masterpiece by one of Southern fiction's leading voices.

Pub Date: March 3, 2020

ISBN: 978-0-316-52981-5

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Little, Brown

Review Posted Online: Dec. 8, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2020

Categories:
Next book

LATE IN THE DAY

Restrained and tender.

The 30-year bond between a quartet of close friends—two couples—comes unglued when one of them dies unexpectedly in Hadley’s (The Past, 2016, etc.) quietly riveting latest.

Christine and Alex and Lydia and Zachary have been close since their early 20s; now in their 50s, they’re still close, the friendships among them still anchoring their lives. And then one night, Christine and Alex are listening to music when the telephone rings. It’s Lydia, from the hospital. Zachary is dead. He was fine, at his office at the gallery, talking about the next show, and then he wasn’t. Then he keeled over and was dead. For all the years they’ve known each other, Zachary has been a gentle force of nature. “Of all of us,” Christine thinks, “he’s the one we couldn’t afford to lose.” In the immediate aftermath of his death, the families band together: Alex goes to collect Lydia and Zachary’s daughter from college; Lydia comes to live, for a while, with her best friends. The women have been close since childhood, Lydia theatrical and romantic and borderline frivolous; Christine serious and artistic, the practical one of the pair. Shortly after university, the women met Alex and Zachary, also childhood friends. In the early days, it was Lydia who was in love with Alex, although he was unhappily married to somebody else. Zachary was well-matched with Christine. The partnerships evolved without animosity: Zachary married Lydia, in the end. Alex married Christine. For three decades, they remained close, the history between them no threat to the happy present. But after Zachary’s death, their pleasant equilibrium is thrown forever off-kilter, as remnants from the past bubble up to the surface. A four-person character study—here as always, Hadley is a master of interpersonal dynamics—the novel captures the complexity of loss. Their grief is not only for Zachary; it is for the lives they thought they knew.

Restrained and tender.

Pub Date: Jan. 15, 2019

ISBN: 978-0-06-247669-2

Page Count: 288

Publisher: Harper/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: Oct. 1, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2018

Close Quickview