Racial tensions rise one hot summer over a native blockade, though the characters monopolized my thoughts much more than the temperature or the plot.
The most impressive aspect of Smoke River for me was the author’s ability to get inside the hearts and minds of such disparate characters, different ages, races, and classes, each came off as realistic, like they might actually be a person in the world.
If I went into detail on the large cast of characters this would grow into one of those mile long reviews that I rarely have the energy to read, so I’ll spare you that, and mention the two characters that interested me most - Cherisse, an aspiring singer, who yearns for bigger and better beyond the confines of the reserve and her father’s tobacco shack, and Stephanie, her mom’s greatest disappointment, who doesn’t measure up to her (not-so) golden boy brother, especially when she, a white teen, falls for a native guy.
While Smoke River never became quite as explosive as I thought it might, if you like your books intelligent and character driven, give this a try.
I received this through a Goodreads giveaway.