In A PERSISTENT ECHO, by Brian Kaufman, the reader meets August Simms as he arrives by train in Rhome, Texas. The year is 1897, and sightings of flying machines have been reported in California, the Midwest and, only days ago, in Rhome. Having secured a driver and a room in a boarding house, he will speak personally to those who claim to have seen the mysterious machines.
August Simms, first a college professor, then, in the Union Army, a commander of troops of color (taking meals with his men rather than other officers), has long worked in the field of archaeology and has traveled widely. Obviously well-read, each morning he buys and shares three different newspapers with the “morning-coffee regulars” at Rhome’s general store, although he expresses distrust of the popular press. While uncommonly courteous, he does not bow to self-styled arbiters of what is right and what is true when in his investigation he interacts with purveyors of power—a doctor, a lawyer, a judge, a minister—and the owner of two flour mills, an overseer.
His life has been full, but he feels the absence of his dear wife who died many years ago in the very room in which he is staying. And now he is ill. He observes, “I can’t change the past and I’m running out of future.”
August Simms is looking for one last adventure. Or a miracle.
Author Brian Kaufman, in A PERSISTENT ECHO, has given us a protagonist of rare quality. I find August Simms—with his old-fashioned courtesy, sometimes startling honesty, and a hint of mystery—equal in appeal to Captain Jefferson Kyle Kidd in Paulette Jiles’ NEWS OF THE WORLD, a book which ranks in my topmost few of historical novels.
Kaufman addresses the full range of senses and creates that “something more” which comes of superb skill with language. Note his descriptions of the play of light and fragrances of nightfall when the boarding house’s owner comes from the porch holding a lantern. “The light casts a sepia glow across the yard, adding to the flickering of torches.” And, “The night air carries a parade of spring rain smells—damp saw grass, dandelions, and black gumbo clay soil.”
The flickering of torches? Yes. The small town of Rhome, Texas, is host to all the multi-layered issues of the world at large: gender bias, misunderstood human sexuality, racial inequality and disregard for workers’ rights. In a potentially deadly confrontation, August must employ mediation skills honed in the military to restore order in the community.
Yet, ever there is beauty. “Across the field, a doe stands on long, spindly legs—still as a statue in the rain... A motte of trees stands like a dark sentinel watching over the horizon.”
A PERSISTENT ECHO is a book of substance, relevant to current issues, and a story to savor.
I received an ARC of this book from NetGalley. My review is voluntary and honest.