Hold on! What in the "HELL" did I just read?
Did I also read this is supposed to be Adam's debut novel?
There is no way this is the work of a newcomer; someone is pulling our leg. Adam's position is that of a true "WORDSMITH."
Jackal is an experience unsurpassed by any other you may have encountered.
Let us begin:
32-year-old Liz Rocher is returning to her hometown of Johnstown, Pennsylvania, for her best friend Mel's wedding. Liz has not returned to Johnstown in 15 years and had no intentions of ever returning. Then Mel called with her news that she was getting married and nothing could keep Liz from being there for Mel. Nor the chance to see her beautiful nine-year-old goddaughter Caroline, Mel's daughter.
To Liz's shock and dismay, Mel tells her that the wedding will be held outside, in the woods. Near to where the body of the girl they went to H.S. with years ago was found. It is also a place where Liz has gotten a deep scar on her wrist, and she can't fully recall precisely what happened. Liz is still apprehensive about the woods but has a pep talk with herself and proceeds to remind herself she's only there for 48 hours.
The wedding guests are in full swing when Liz is supposed to be watching Caroline but gets distracted by Chris (a guy she had a crush on in H.S.), who is working as the bartender. Chris is one of the few people that remember Liz and begins to converse with her until they are interrupted by his ex Lauren.
Liz excuses herself and goes back outside; when she looks for Caroline, she doesn't see her. Liz frantically looks all over, asking everyone, until she gets the courage to look where Caroline was last. (Playing near the woods.) It takes all of her strength to step foot into those woods, but for Caroline, she would do anything. When Liz goes in, at first, she sees nothing until she steps further in, and that's when she sees Caroline's torn dress with blood on it. Immediately the wedding is no longer a wedding but now a mother frantic looking for her child.
Liz is taken to the station, where she is swabbed for DNA and fingerprinted since she was the one who found Caroline's torn dress. While there, she befriends one of the officers named Doug, who becomes an invaluable source of information to her.
A couple of days go by, and the police have still not found any leads to Caroline's whereabouts when the knowledge sets in for Mel. Mel pulls Liz into the woods out of earshot of others and asks, "They aren't really looking for Caroline because she's a brown girl, are they?" Liz is stunned by Mel's question but knows she's probably right. Because had Caroline's father not been black, she probably would have been found already. But since Mel is her best friend, she doesn't want to let her know what she's thinking.
Liz vows to Mel that she will do everything possible to get her goddaughter back and bring her home.
The mother of their classmate Keisha, Denise, tells her that her daughter didn't die of an accident like they say she did.
That if Liz really wants to know what happened, she needs to meet the others. Liz is baffled, not knowing what Denise is talking about because it's daytime, and clearly, she's drunk. Denise tells her to meet her at the Church in the morning Downtown.
Doug, however, has news that Keisha didn't die from an accident, that whoever did this cut her in a certain way and removed her heart.
The next day Liz goes to the Church, and she is met with the most shocking revelation. Five women are there, each with a different story to tell.
However, they all share the same time frame, June, and the first day of the summer solstice. As the meeting ends,
Liz speaks to the youngest of the group, named Kylie.
Kylie tells Liz, "You ever just get that feeling like something bad is about to happen? Like you just know when it's the end?"
And that's where I must leave you, my fellow readers.
Believe me; there is so much that will BLOW YOUR MIND!!
Adam's inimitable writing style is astonishing. Her word-building is stellar, and her descriptive, spellbinding feel of the woods made you believe the warnings.
Adam's characters within the town felt true to life. You could feel the hostility exuding from them, especially Nick.
However, you could also feel a certain cowardice from Garret and Dr. Rocher. (With Dr. Rocher, I could understand because she was older, Garrett I could not.)
Adams shares a story rich in historical non-fiction but also in racism, classism, and, most importantly, the lack of attention when women of color go missing.
What if Caroline had been white? Do you think it would take over 48 hours to get the police to respond thoroughly?
How does a wild animal perfectly excise a heart in that fashion with Keisha? Yet it's ruled an accident because she's black?
Why is it that the police don't put any actual manpower into looking for women of color who go missing?
So what!
Do they think they just up and want to be missing?
These are just things to ponder.
Adam's afterword was incredibly informative, not only about her city but also about her life. Especially the part of a predominantly white neighborhood; however, mine wasn't like hers, and I was 5 hours away like Liz in NYC. Only this was in the '70s when you would have thought it would have been how she describes her time.
I went to Catholic School in the Bronx and was the only black child from pre-k to second grade. The funny thing is I never noticed it until I moved and looked at a picture of my communion years later.
That's how it should be. Who cares what color each other is?
Because when you're in the morgue, nobody gives a damn what color you are
.
We only have two ways to go, cremation or in the ground.
"SUPERB!!!!!"
JE NE SAIS QUAI
"SIMPLY BRILLIANT"
"BEST OF 2022"
"YOU DID THAT, GIRL!"
Thank you, NetGalley/Erin E. Adams/Random House Publishing Group-Ballantine.Bantam/ For this mesmerizing eArc for my honest review. My opinions are of my own volition.