Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter by Tom Franklin, 272 pages
This is a book I remember reading rave reviews of a few years ago, and
it lived up to recommendations. Mississippi now, and in flashbacks to
the 1970s, as two characters, one black and one white, become somewhat
friends. Larry Ott, possibly the saddest character I've read in a while,
was accused although never charged after a girl he dated went missing. Since she was never
found, he lives under that suspicion. Silas Jones, the black friend, has
grown into the town Constable.
The book is about race, and friendship, and loneliness. Actually quite timely as I was reading this as the Zimmerman trial ended. Being found not guilty (or never even charged) does not guarantee that you get to just continue your life. Societal punishment can be even worse than jail time. Really good novel, with a bit of a mystery that although telegraphed long before the end, was still heart-breaking.
also reviewed: wendy at caribousmom; bookfool at bookfoolery; rhapsody in books; gavin at page247; suziqoregon at whimpulsive; maggie at maggiereads;
(When I started looking up other reviews, I found nearly every bookblogger I know! I picked a few but left out a bunch because there were too many. I knew I had read tons of rave reviews a few years ago. Are you the other last person who hasn't read Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter?)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thanks for commenting, so nice of you to visit.
(I'll try without the letters for a while - so please dont be a spammer! Let's try no anonymous users)