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HER OWN DEVICES by Geoffrey Dutton

HER OWN DEVICES

A Novel or Two

by Geoffrey Dutton

Pub Date: Sept. 1st, 2024
ISBN: 9781771838986
Publisher: Guernica Editions

A single mother can’t leave her social conscience behind in Dutton’s suspenseful drama.

In this loose sequel to the author’s Turkey Shoot (2018), Anna Burmeister is in transition, raising her 5-year-old son, Ramadi, in Piraeus, Greece, while still mourning his father, Mahmoud, who was killed in the earlier book. Mahmoud isn’t as far away as she thinks, as he’s been denied entry to Paradise (“Where I find myself now is very strange and lonely, a plane I have all to myself. Perhaps this is perdition and I am doomed to isolation for eternity”). One day, Anna witnesses a young boy, Sami, being abducted. The kidnapper is freed in court by a judge, to the disgust of Anna, who has already organized the Children’s Protective League of Greater Athens in an effort to shine a spotlight on child trafficking. She recruits her hacker friend, Ottovio, to surveil the trafficker who got off, as well as his associates. Anna also assembles a motley crew of allies from media, social services, law enforcement, and her friend group to be ready to pounce on the traffickers when they make their next move. When Ramadi spies two men grabbing Naila, a young refugee girl, Anna rallies all her forces, marching on the traffickers’ hideout. Dutton has hit upon a novel method to construct a character: Anna is presented as a real person whose story has been lightly fictionalized by the author of the two books that feature her (by the time readers reach the end, they will likely have forgotten about this somewhat confusing conceit). Dutton introduces a ton of characters to keep track of, who tend to appear briefly and then vanish for dozens of pages. Waiting for an actual abduction seems to take forever, and it’s apparent to everyone but Anna which side a cop whom she believes to be corrupt is really on. The preceding novel was Mahmoud’s story—this book is Anna’s tale, and the anarchist is appropriately making up her life as she goes along, leading with her heart.

An urgent crusade to keep children safe drives this colorful, fictional biography.