Saturday, March 7, 2020

Hard Cash Valley by Brian Panowich


 
Dane Kirby, former fire chief up in McFalls County, GA. Bull Mountain territory. Kirby is no longer looking at arson cases having joined the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. The sheriff calls on Kirby to look in on a local murder because the suspect says he is a friend of Dane. At least until the FBI tells his boss to send Kirby to Jacksonville, FL to look into a case with a fire link.

One of those ubiquitous airport hotels had a fire in a room. A hot flash fire that burned itself out fast. It was an attempt to cover up a murder so grisly that even a hardened investigator like Kirby gags. The victim was first tortured then disemboweled while still alive. The who and the why can’t be answered. An unremarkable clue suggests the victim has a brother.

Kirby is paired with Special Agent Roselita Velasquez. They learn about the victim – Arnold Blackwell. Two-bit crook with a long string of drug and robbery arrests. They learn that Arnold had a brother. Younger. Pre-teen. With Asperger’s Syndrome. Likes birds. A lot. And he has Rain Man-like affinity for numbers and odds.

The killers are Filipino mafia who have major money in cock fighting. Turns out a major ‘tournament’ that floats from city to city had just concluded in the Bull Mountain area. Arnold’s little brother’s specific skill is an unrivaled ability to pick winners in a cock fight. The two of them took this ‘tournament’ for over a million dollars. The Filipino’s had a big stake in the competition, and they want their money back.

Kirby and Roselita (not ‘Rose’) track backwards in time and upwards in altitude to Bull Mountain. To find the boy. To find the money. To the site of the cock fighting fest. And back around to that local murder.

This is Panowich’s 3rd venture into the Bull Mountain corner of NW Georgia. His first, Bull Mountain knocked me off my feet. His 2nd, Like Lions, blew me away. Hard Cash Valley? Good Lord. Panowich can flat out write. Hard to believe this is just his 3rd outing. The maturity of his storytelling. The turn of a phrase. The depth of pain felt by his characters. The enormity of viciousness of the crimes. The body count. The twists in loyalty and in the story. Call it what you will: country noir, hick-lit, Redneck noir. I don’t care. Panowich is flat out one of the best new voices in fiction I’ve read . . . ever. Three books and he has shouldered his way into my power rotation. And that’s a first. Panowich is that great.

Available in May 2020.

1 comment:

  1. More brutal and graphic than most novels that I read, even considering that most of those novels are murder mysteries - but Panowich knows how to tell a gripping story with great characters, both good guys and bad guys. This one gets a 5-star rating.

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