An unemployed war veteran investigates a tragic crime in Gates’ 1960-set mystery novel, the second in a series.
Harry Cogbill has gotten himself fired again. This time it’s from the combination restaurant-gift shop across the river from his home in King George County, Virginia, where he worked as a grill cook. After getting startled by a New York mafioso in the restaurant, Cogbill, a shell-shocked World War II vet, blacked out and roughed up his boss. His unemployment is not well received by his wife, Ethel Burkitt, who wants better things for Harry and isn’t afraid to give him the cold shoulder to force him in the right direction. A few days after the firing, while hunting for a new job, Harry learns that one of his co-workers at the restaurant, William Johnson, is now wanted for stabbing a man to death. Harry can’t believe the young Black man—a good kid—would do such a thing and assumes he’s being scapegoated. After speaking to the young man’s family, Cogbill learns the still-at-large William did commit the murder, though Cogbill can’t figure out why. Putting his job search on hold, Cogbill turns amateur detective—a role he’s played in the past—in order to get to the bottom of the crime. Doing so, he’ll run up against the worst that King George County has to offer: transplant mobsters, local crooks, and the deeply entrenched racism of the South. Can Cogbill once again quiet his demons, catch the bad guys, and get back in good with his Ethel? Gates’ measured prose carries a tinge of the Southern Gothic, lending a biblical weight to the narrative: “The weather had turned cold and the sun had begun its annual retreat to the throne of judgment from which it cast its pale, solitary eye upon the grey and barren earth.” Though he trades in the tropes of the crime novel, Gates is most deeply interested in the psychology of his characters and the way they fit (or don’t) in the world. Fans of the previous Harry Cogbill novel will not be disappointed.
A stylish and thoughtful crime novel.