Cynthia A. Graham
Auteur de Beneath Still Waters
Œuvres de Cynthia A. Graham
The cultural context of sexual pleasure and problems psychotherapy with diverse clients (2012) 3 exemplaires
Asexuality Classification and characterization 1 exemplaire
The Journal of Sex Research, Vol 52, No 5 June 2015 1 exemplaire
Étiqueté
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Membres
Critiques
Prix et récompenses
Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 8
- Membres
- 30
- Popularité
- #449,942
- Évaluation
- 4.5
- Critiques
- 3
- ISBN
- 14
Perhaps enjoyed is the wrong word. It's always hard with books that tackle difficult topics to call the reading experience enjoyment. It was definitely thought provoking and the issues brought up involving race are certainly still, to some degree under discussion today. Despite the whole Civil Rights Act and our supposed enlightenment people of color are still being treated as second class citizens.
But off of my soapbox and back to the book. Ms. Graham has a deceptively simple writing style - it is brilliant in its simplicity. She provides only the words that are needed without any flowery extras. Often a mood in a book is ruined when an author tries too hard - that doesn't happen here. The perfect atmosphere is there for whatever is happening whether the hero is trying to let his wife know he loves her but just doesn't have the words or the young black boy unjustly imprisoned just goes with the flow.
What you are reading is a tale of good versus evil in the form of two men - sheriffs from neighboring towns. Evil comes in the form of Sheriff Brewster, a man who controls his town by intimidation and blackmail. Good is the hero, Hick Blackburn, a family man returned from the war with memories he can't shake. They have tangled before and Hick knows the lengths Brewster will go to in order to protect his fiefdom.
The hows and the whys of Brewster's need and obsession to pin the hit and run on the young black boy are the drivers of the plot. Hick is determined to prove that the young boy is not the killer but forces are against him as Brewster riles up the town against anyone who is not white. It all comes to a head with a visit of a gubernatorial candidate. Will Brewster be able to prove the young boy's innocence before a mob decides to provide some "local" justice?
I read this book on a car ride and I hardly felt time passing. The writing kept me engaged and the characters were unique and the kind you might want to meet - except for Sheriff Brewster of course. As I noted above I am very much looking forward to the next installment in the series. Ms. Graham is going to be another on the very small list of authors I will read even though they write murder mystery type novels.… (plus d'informations)