Available Today! (August 20, 2024)
Hollow Out The Dark by @jameswadewriter is a dark, gritty, thought-provoking look into humanity that will have you examining your own beliefs. It's a tale of sacrifice, morals and ethics, right vs wrong, corruption and greed, and so much more. Beautifully written with nuanced characters, a plot that's delicately woven together, in a setting that's so artfully crafted that it transports you through time and space, and a pace that will have you not wanting to put it down. Eloquently sprinkling in mental health and sign language rep was a unexpected bonus.
Hollow Out The Dark shuttles you to a small town in Depression-Era Texas, where the book takes place. Prohibition is still the law and bootlegging runs rampant, threatening to destroy a small town.
"When the oil came up in Kilgore, so did every swinging dick thinking they was gonna get out of the depression..." "A bunch of pimps, gamblers, and kids with guns thinking they'd be the next comic book outlaw."
Then, a Texas Ranger, Amon, is sent to investigate a murder in the aforementioned small town. Amon who had long been buried beneath his father's shadow, desparate for to make his dad proud, but also desparate to not be like his father. Meanwhile, another main character, Jesse, a decorated Great War veteran, is just doing what he can to keep him and his family afloat during a long, cold winter. A family he inherited when his older brother passed away.
The setting is truly like being transported. I've never even been to Texas in real life, but I feel like I have now. It's gritty and somber, while also being haunting and yet hopeful. It is a darker book.
The plot is great. I was hooked immediately and couldn't stop reading. The twists and turns that unfold are great. There's so much going on, but it doesn't feel like too much-not at all thanks to the elegant way Wade layers and weaves all of it together.
Wade's prose is truly a work of art. He has a way with words that you don't often come across. I found myself re-reading sentences, or even entire passages, just to marvel at the gorgeous way he writes.
Wade's prose is almost lyrical at times, but not in a pretentious way. Even when writes about simple, mundane things, like the wind, it's beautiful.
"The wind was cold and relentless, and each gust filled the forest with a wretched and woeful sound-the low howling keen of the wind, the barren and abraded branches scraping against one another like deviant violins..."
Wade's dialogue is also great. I love that he incorporated small bits of very light humor (although humor isn't quite accurate) into the dialogue to lighten such a haunting, dark, gritty, somber book. These occasional small bits of levity aid in easing the material from feeling too dark and heavy.
Maybe light-hearted would be more accurate, although that doesn't sound right, either. Here's an example: "... I ain't about to leave Gloria Swineson [a pig] out there with them..." "Don't let Albert Swinestein hear you say that...That little bastard has gone and changed his whole demeanor. Walks with some sort of regality to him now."
The characters were so well written that I took a second to do a web search, thinking maybe this book was based on a true story. They're that wildly realistic. They're flawed, like we all are, and you'll be torn on loving them or loving to hate them.
I love that even though it's a shorter novel than what I've been reading as of late (328pgs), it packs a lot of emotion in. I also love that Wade incorporates a study in bigger topics that are relevant still - like corruption. Even some that will likely be relevant for eternity (How far will you go for the ones you love? When push comes to shove, what lines are you willing to cross?) There's a lot of distrust in the government back then, as there is now. I love that this book makes you rethink some things, like corruption and what it means, and how corruption could start from a place of love.
There's some mental health rep for PTSD, although it isn't referred to as such, as well as sign language rep.
If you don't like books that write with an "accent," use colloquialisms, or use words like "ain't," well, this probably ain't the book for you. 😆 But seriously, unless those are things you just absolutely detest, I strongly recommend you give this one a quick read.
If you enjoy criminal fiction, historical fiction, mystery, and/or thriller, I think you would enjoy this. I can't think of another author or book that's similar.
This is the first book I've read by James Wade, but it certainly won't be my last. Hollow Out The Dark is Southern Gothic with crime, and this book was my introduction to a genre called rural noir.
If CW/TW are a concern for you, please look into them before reading. This is a dark book and contains a fair bit of potentially triggering material (violence, death, war, alcohol use and abuse, etc).
Thank you to @wadejameswriter, @blackstonepublishing, and @Netgalley for the eARC. I'm choosing to leave this unbiased review.