Hell on the Border, the second book of Sidney Thompson's The Bass Reeves Trilogy, is a powerful continuation of the story Thompson began with Follow the Angels, Follow the Doves. Both novels are historical fiction at its finest, examining the past and indirectly commenting on the present. In some ways Bass Reeves, who was a Black lawman in the late 1800s, is a larger-than-life figure, and histories of his life have been written, but it's Thompson's job as a novelist to present him as a complex and flawed character. When Reeves is jailed for the murder of another Black man, a friend to Reeves, there are no easy answers to explain what happened, neither legally nor morally and spiritually within Reeves. Thompson takes us where historians can't, into the mind and soul of the character, and he does so with keen insight and rich language. I can't wait to read the final book.