|
|
Book Blurbs
Special Summer All-Fiction Edition
|
|
Evening News
by Marly Swick, '71
Little, Brown and Co., 1999; $23.
|
Swick's
second novel opens with a wrenching scene in which
9-year-old Teddy accidentally shoots and kills his
half-sister, Trina. The rest of the story focuses on how a
grieving mother's loyalties are stretched between her
husband, who has just lost his only child, and her son from
a previous marriage, who pulled the trigger. The rift opens
as Giselle and Dan are driving home from the hospital after
their 23-month-old daughter is pronounced dead: "Already she
sensed an ominous difference between them: he wanted to know
everything, and she didn't want to know anything." At the
same time, Giselle wavers between feeling angry with Teddy
and wanting to protect him. "It had never occurred to her
that what accident meant was unintentional,"
Swick writes. "It didn't mean blameless."
|
|
Harmful Intent
by Baine Kerr, '68
Scribner, 1999; $25.
|
Peter
Moss is a burned-out lawyer determined to put his life in
order after a devastating courtroom defeat. He vows never
again to take on a medical malpractice case and to keep some
emotional distance from his clients from now on. Then along
comes Terry Winter. She's a victim of the same doctor Moss
has just failed to bring to justice; he can't turn her away.
The facts of the case seem plain: her physician willfully
ignored a breast tumor until the cancer became terminal. But
why? Kerr, a malpractice lawyer himself, spins the story
around a runaway client, discredited witnesses, a crusty
judge and a hero dismissed from his firm for refusing to
drop the case. But Moss fights on in a plot that perplexes
up to its surprising finish.
|
|
The Freshour Cylinders
by Speer Morgan, PhD '72
MacMurray & Beck, 1998; $23.
|
Morgan,
a creative writing professor at the University of Missouri,
blends ancient Indian lore with Depression-era political
corruption in his fifth novel, a mystery set in the Dust
Bowl of Oklahoma and Arkansas. At the center is a
part-Choctaw prosecuting attorney, Tom Freshour, who becomes
entangled with sexy archaeologist Rainy Davis. Together they
probe the death of a collector of pre-Columbian artifacts
and uncover the true origins of a feathered cape that has
turned up in a local Indian burial mound. It's a suspenseful
story -- part Philip Marlowe, part Indiana Jones --
involving ritual sacrifices, a car explosion, Mayan ruins
and a rash of arsenic poisonings.
|
|
Chocolate Lizards
by Cole Thompson, '87
St. Martin's Press, 1999; $22.95.
|
Recent
Harvard grad Edwin Vanderveer is on his way home to Boston
from Los Angeles aboard a Greyhound bus when he loses his
last $100 to a one-eyed swindler. He ends up penniless in
Abilene, a West Texas oil town that seems to have more
tumbleweeds than residents. So begins this fish-out-of-water
story that leads Edwin, an aspiring actor who has just given
up his dream of Hollywood stardom, into the employ of Merle
Luskey, a hapless oil prospector running a whiskey-fueled
race to strike oil before the bank forecloses on his
drilling equipment. Edwin muddles through a crash course in
petroleum geology and roughnecking while helping Merle
secure an oil lease with the assistance of a buxom
prostitute named Tex-Ann. In the end, he embraces Merle's
philosophy of life: "Don't quit on yer dream. You'll go sour
inside."
|