Everyone
has some kind of secret. When you live in a small town, secrets are even harder
to keep. Secrets, a cold murder case and a new murder are the essences behind
Tower Lowe’s first book in the Cotton Lee Penn Historical Mystery series.
Set
in Virginia in the years 1932 and 1972, Lowe provides readers with a taste of
Southern Gothic—both from the Old South and the New South. It is sad that those
tastes hadn’t changed in those forty years.
The
book opens with lawyer Max Mayfield hiring the novel’s protagonist, Cotton Lee
Penn, to help him investigate the beating death of Little Mary in 1972. The
case is quite disturbing in that it bears many, many similarities to the unsolved
1932 beating death of Bead Baker (I found it both odd an interesting that each
time Bead is mentioned, it’s always with her full name: Bead Baker.). Even more
fascinating is that Little Mary is Bead Baker’s granddaughter.
Many in the town wonder why Max turned to Cotton Lee. After all, she is a cripple thanks to polio and walks with a limp. But as far as Max is concerned, Cotton Lee is the “smartest white person Sussex County.” (That was uttered in 1972!)
The novel jumps back and forth between 1932 and 1972, as Cotton Lee is certain that the two murders are connected. The hard part about this novel is that the possible suspects all have ties to Bead Baker’s murder. Keeping the character straight was often difficult at times. It would have been nice to have a character list in the front or back. Still, that doesn’t hinder the fast pace of the novel, or this reader’s inability to put it down.
But,
quickly, here are the suspects: Did Sharp Dorn, the local, philandering and abusing
minister kill Bead Baker for putting ideas in his wife Verdie’s head? Did
Dorn’s son, Ron, kill Little Mary? Or was it the hired help Zed Omen in 1932
and his grandson, Doug, in 1972? I’m not sure how Lowe kept them all straight.
Another thing
that bothered me, is the way that flashbacks are told in italics. It’s jarring
and as I first began to read, it took me out to of the story. However, once I
got into the book’s rhythm, well, it was fascinating.
When Cotton Lee
discovers some of the town’s (current and past) secrets, readers are led to the
shocking conclusion.
Although
I have the two problem areas, Gone on Sunday,
receives 6 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world. I highly recommend it.
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