A powerful family in a small Texas town is wracked by miseries of its own making.
The Briscoes are a train wreck no one in Olympus can look away from. Patriarch Peter Briscoe, a real estate baron, has been chronically unfaithful, resulting in at least three illegitimate children by at least two women other than his wife, June—those are the ones he knows about, anyway. Two of these kids, twins Arlo and Artie, were raised by their mother, Lee, in a house across town from the Briscoe acreage yet were supported by Peter and treated as siblings of his three children with June: Thea, Hap, and March. Once all these kids grew up, a couple of them intentionally put many miles between themselves and Olympus, but the remaining group more than managed to keep the scandals, betrayals, fistfights, and other fireworks going strong. March had an affair with his brother's wife that blew up so badly he's been out of town and estranged from most of the family for two years. As the book opens, his return to Olympus generates drama that is quickly sidelined when rock star Arlo and hunting guide Artie are involved in a gun accident that leaves a corpse floating in the river. Meanwhile, June's been in a bad mood for decades—that is, until the balding vet who comes over to help her castrate calves puts a smile on her face. Swann's debut is rich in Texas flavor and full of nods to classical mythology—quotes from Ovid, twins human and canine, and the kind of relentless bad luck that usually means you've offended a deity.
A total page-turner.