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GRAVITY HILL by Susanne Davis

GRAVITY HILL

by Susanne Davis

Pub Date: Sept. 20th, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-956440-06-5
Publisher: Madville Publishing

In this dramatic mystery, a teenager stuck in her small New England town takes a closer look at her brother’s fatal car accident.

Jordan Hawkins gives up a full scholarship to stay on her family farm in Asheville, Connecticut. The recent high school graduate puts college on hold, as she’s not sure her parents can handle the farm work without her. It’s only been a month since they lost Clay, Jordan’s older brother, who drove a truck with friends Tim Hatch and Tony Barbo into a tree—likely the result of drinking. Jordan becomes withdrawn and does little more than work at a factory and tend to the cows at home. But she does take some solace in Tim’s cousin Win Hatch, a former Asheville local who graduated from high school over a decade ago and now lives and works in Maine. There’s a chance their physical relationship could turn into something more, but then Jordan learns of Win’s somber past. He’s a recovering alcoholic who’s reputedly served time behind bars. As if that weren’t enough, Tony’s mom files suit against the Hawkins family and demands a much greater settlement than the farm insurance will cover. Townsfolk blame Clay for the others’ deaths, but Jordan has questions: How fast was he driving to cause the truck to burst into flames? When she finally investigates the accident, she somehow links it to an old toxic waste dump site. This shines a light on Asheville’s sordid history and stirs up secrets that some people don’t want unearthed.

Although mystery surrounds the truck accident, Davis’ character-driven story centers on its young protagonist. She’s resilient and sympathetic. Jordan denies herself time to grieve while Tony’s mother and even her own parents seem to forget she’s lost her brother. Jordan’s life gets more complicated later when she faces an important decision that, regardless of anyone else’s input, she must make on her own. The author effectively steeps the narrative in metaphors and analogies, from Jordan’s search for imperfections in bottles at the factory to the book’s title—a real-life place and anomaly in which cars in neutral ostensibly roll uphill. The simple, arresting prose is similarly inspired. Here, Jordan listens at her feuding parents’ bedroom door: “She waited there, crouched until her legs cramped and the cold settled into her bones. She heard her father snoring and her mother weeping, and she went back to bed, but she saw the sky change to a melon color before she fell into an uneasy sleep.” Supporting characters enrich Jordan’s tale and display distinctive personalities, including not-always-likable Win and environmentalist Eugene Martin, who’s keen on a fern species on the Hawkins property. While this cast propels the story, the understated mystery still engages. Readers, for example, know no more than Jordan regarding the fatal accident, and Asheville locals harbor quite a few skeletons. The final act wraps up this enigma without losing sight of the main journey as Jordan hopefully comes to terms with herself and where she wants to be.

A remarkable protagonist leads a robust cast in this absorbing tale of self-discovery.