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David R. Stokes

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BOOK REVIEW

Jake & Clara

BY David R. Stokes • POSTED ON Nov. 20, 2015

Stokes’ (How to Keep Calm and Carry On, 2014, etc.) crisp work of historical fiction animates the most sensational homicide trial in the criminal annals of Oklahoma.

It’s a familiar story. A middle-aged man falls in love with a much younger woman, and they carry on for years, until stronger passions, such as the desire for power and fame, conflict with what passes for love. It’s worth noting that the middle-aged man in this true story was “the Oil King of Oklahoma,” Jacob “Jake” Hamon, slated to be a member of President Warren Harding’s cabinet until his megalomania and other character failings derailed his ambitions and ended up costing him his life. Hamon was 37, and his paramour, Clara Smith, was just 17 when she came to his attention. Never mind that he was a prominent Republican and a married man with two children, Jake installs his mistress in a hotel suite in the Oklahoma town of Ardmore. Clara, for her part, is no wide-eyed ingénue , exploiting Hamon’s riches to pad her own purse. Eventually Jake’s megalomania kicks in, and he dumps Clara for political gain only to have her fatally shoot him. Stokes’ tightly paced narrative keeps humming even when it’s focused not just on the sensational crime, but all associated players as well. Especially impressive is the nuanced character development—there are no uniformly good or bad guys here; even Jake’s long-suffering wife exploits his death to raise her own social standing. Despite a lag in the action toward the end—when the story focuses on the aftermath of the shooting and Clara’s 15 minutes of fame—it’s a revealing exercise in the way public opinion can make or break one person’s fortunes. A relevant lesson in today’s hashtag-driven pop-culture world.

A potent, nearly perfect brew of politics, murder, mayhem, and mystery.

Pub Date: Nov. 20, 2015

ISBN: 978-0-9969892-0-6

Page count: 348pp

Publisher: Critical Mass Press

Review Posted Online: Dec. 15, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2016

CAMELOT'S COUSIN Cover
BOOK REVIEW

CAMELOT'S COUSIN

BY David R. Stokes • POSTED ON Sept. 19, 2012

In this impeccably researched spy novel, a radio personality hunts for the answer to one of the 20th century’s biggest unsolved mysteries.

Templeton Davis, a respected talk radio host, is a happy man. Between his lucrative day job and a side job writing popular books about politics and history (as well as the occasional spy novel), he keeps his active mind busy, even if his house is lonely in the wake of his wife’s death. Then one of the radio engineers digs up a mysterious leather satchel in his Virginia backyard and asks Temp to take a look at it. The satchel bears a set of initials that immediately pique Temp’s interest: H.A.R.P. Back in his personal library, Temp researches the mysterious initials and recalls that they belong to “one of the most famous spies in history,” Kim Philby, a British spy who was recruited at Cambridge University and ultimately defected to the Soviet Union. Temp examines the satchel’s contents and discovers not only a camera, tripod and journal, but a “one-time pad” used to decipher coded messages. Temp can’t understand the coded messages on his own, but fortuitously, he hosts a retired CIA employee on his show who explains how one-time pads work. Once Temp begins to break the code, he realizes that he’s on the verge of unlocking some of the Cold War’s greatest secrets, including the identity of a Soviet spy with the code name Bunny. But will Temp be able to uncover Bunny’s secrets before he’s killed by forces intent on keeping those secrets buried? Stokes skillfully interweaves scenes from the Cold War era with Temp’s present-day investigation, which takes him from New England to England and back again. Occasionally, the fast-paced adventures are sidetracked by too much description. When Temp and his production team travel to Stowe, Vt., so that Temp can make a presentation to the Ohio chapter of the National Association of Insurance and Financial Advisors, the author spends page after page describing Temp’s preparation for the speech, his time in the green room and the speech itself. This digression and others don’t advance the story, and they aren’t particularly revealing, either. Also, because the research is so thorough and the voice so authoritative, it’s especially jarring when errors arise, such as a character who has a “flare” for language.

This wide-ranging spy thriller needs a little tightening if it wants to become as powerful as a Soviet assassin.

Pub Date: Sept. 19, 2012

ISBN: 978-1938701375

Page count: 330pp

Publisher: Telemachus Press

Review Posted Online: Oct. 19, 2012

THE SHOOTING SALVATIONIST Cover
BOOK REVIEW

THE SHOOTING SALVATIONIST

BY David R. Stokes • POSTED ON July 12, 2011

Account of a highly publicized 1926 murder in Fort Worth, Texas, and the trial of accused killer J. Frank Norris, a fiery fundamentalist preacher.

Norris, whose Fort Worth church reputedly attracted more parishioners than any other in the United States during the 1920s, preached a gospel of hatred against African-Americans, Catholics and other targets. Using a newspaper he founded and a radio station, he reached audiences in a similar manner as Jerry Falwell decades later. Regularly inserting himself into controversies about the direction of Fort Worth government and business, Norris collected enemies and friends with equal aplomb. A lumber tycoon named Dexter Elliott Chipps became one of the enemies. One day in 1926, Chipps, known for his drinking, womanizing and large physical presence, called Norris at church to announce he would be walking over for a talk. When he arrived, Chipps apparently warned Norris to withdraw certain criticisms of Fort Worth leaders. Claiming to fear for his life, Norris pulled a gun and shot the unarmed Chipps dead in the church office. The criminal trial moved from Fort Worth to Austin because of prejudicial publicity. Journalists from around the nation and world covered the trial, which centered on the question of whether Norris had killed Chipps in self-defense. The jury acquitted Norris, who then remained active in fundamentalist church circles and right-wing political circles until his death in 1952. Sharing the spotlight in the narrative are the Chipps family members, church employees and congregants loyal to their minister, Fort Worth social and political big shots and well-known lawyers on both sides of the case.

 

Pub Date: July 12, 2011

ISBN: 978-1-58642-186-1

Page count: 384pp

Publisher: Steerforth

Review Posted Online: April 18, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2011

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