Satisfying entertainment in a sub-genre that could be tagged “eco-thriller”. Our hero, Thorn (no last name), is sort of an aging hippie with some undisclosed ex-Special Forces background. He is said to resemble John McDonald’s Travis McGee, but without the social graces. He likes to live a simple life off the grid in Key West, making a living creating fishing flies. Inevitably, trouble among friends or family calls him out to apply his skills in battle with corrupt and greedy forces, typically conflicts that highlight environmental issues. Here the bad guys are linked to high-intensity hog farming in rural North Carolina.
The family member in trouble this time is an adult son, Flynn, whom he has only recently come to know. In a prior book, he introduced him to the beauty of the Florida environment, which leads Flynn down a path to eco-activism. The group he now works with, the Earth Liberation Front, has stepped up their scale of actions to the point they are wanted by the FBI for various actions identified as eco-terrorism. In the first scenes of the book, their spying on a hog farm’s operations has turned up an affiliated drug business, and in defense their camp is subject to a brutal armed attack. A postcard from his son about impending dangers leads Thorn to head north to look for Flynn, but as he doesn’t have a driver’s license, his buddy Sugarman agrees to drive him. I love this charming and funny buddy of his, a black private detective who serves as a set of brakes when Thorn’s rage gets out of hand (the opposite of the more typical scenario of bad-boy sidekicks you might recognize under the names of Hawk, Clete, Joe Pike, or Mouse).
The tale has lots of twists and turns as good guys turn into bad, and some betrayals occur among the bad guys. The sardonic coverage over the excesses of cruelties of the hog farm and its pollution impact feels a bit of like Sinclair Lewis crossed with Hiassen. The disgust button is pushed too often for my comfort. One twisted killer who developed a fascistic approach to veganism in prison balances the equation favoring envronmentalists. More caper than mystery, but a bit more Ellroy than Ellmore. The dark humor in Hall’s vision is definitely worth checking out, regardless of series order. Tis is my 12th, so you can say I am a fan. Hall's writing skills reflect his origins as a poet and three decades leading the creative writing program of Florida International University.
This book was provided as an advance e-book copy by the Netgalley program.