Linden MacIntyre is a well-known and distinguished broadcaster with a thirty-year career with the CBC. He became widely known as a writer when he won the 2009 Scotiabandk Giller Prize, Canada’s top literary award for his novel “The Bishop’s Man”. Since then, he has written several more best sellers which continue to showcase his strong writing skills.
This fictional story published in 2014, contains themes that emerge from the work MacIntyre has done as a journalist, his characters emerging loosely from people he met as an investigative reporter and his subject matter from controversial topics heatedly discussed in the media.
Tony Breau is an idealist, a socially conscious corrections officer forced into early retirement after a number of incidents involving Dwayne Strickland, an inmate with a long-troubled history who had once lived in Tony’s home village of St. Ninian in Nova Scotia. An unfortunate incident at the Millhaven Institution in which an inmate died, began Tony’s downhill trajectory which evolved over a period of several years. Things come to a head when both Tony and Dwayne found themselves back in their home village trying to create a new life for themselves. A young girl had mysteriously died and the villagers, anxious for revenge, pinned their suspicion of murder on Strickland, although there was little evidence he was directly responsible. MacIntyre widens the exploration of the issues surrounding these events by setting his story in 2002, expanding them to the global context of 9/11 and the Iraq War. He ties the events together with a common theme, that when disaster strikes, the search for a scapegoat begins, information is manipulated, disinformation is spread and a predetermined outcome brings a solution to the problem.
In St.Ninian, the predetermined outcome was the need to rid the village of Dwayne Strickland, a man who had a long history of creating trouble there as a youth. Because of his past and evidence that was collected or inferred, the villagers decided Strickland was guilty of the murder before the case went to court and must be sent to prison to protect the community. On the world stage, a similar scenario was unfolding. The United States singled out Saddam Hussein as the man responsible for the events of 9/11 and the Iraq War, so they attacked him to keep the world safe. In both crimes, the evidence pointing to the perceived villain was scanty, but information was manipulated to fit the need and propaganda gathered believers to the cause.
Tony Breau a corrections officer at the prison in Kinston, had become alienated from his co-workers because of his progressive and idealistic views. After a serious incident in which an inmate died, Tony’s testimony at the inquiry that followed threw into question the accounts of his colleagues. Following that inquiry, Tony was isolated and ostracized for not sticking to the story the others had agreed upon, one which excused all of them for their behavior which had resulted in a disastrous outcome. Other personal events, including a brief affair with a co-worker and the dissolution of his marriage led to a forced early retirement and Tony left Ontario to get away from it all. He felt abandoned because of the way his career and marriage ended, with so much misunderstanding, untruths and unfinished business. He felt gutted and longed for solitude and peace after looking for so many years at the grim ugliness of limestone walls, chain link fences and the barb wire of the prison system. He wanted something completely different. So he headed back home to St. Ninian, the small coastal village in Nova Scotia where he grew up.
Once home, he encountered Neil Archie MacDonald, a former Vietnam veteran and hot-headed Boston police officer who also grew up in the village, retired early and returned home to run a B and B with his wife Hannah. MacDonald is a tough man. As a cop, he always felt he knew what was best in matters of crime and justice. It came from a well of moral certainty deep inside himself and so convinced him of his stance, he used physical force to enforce what he believed was his high moral purpose. His belief in taking a hard line, extends further to the wider world of international relations and so he supports the Bush/Cheney aggressive approach to the problems in the Middle East.
In MacIntyre’s narrative, Tony and Neil are two characters who illustrate a clear and distinct difference in their views on crime and justice.
There are now three people, who grew up in St. Ninian and have returned to try and restart their lives -- Tony Beau, Neil MacDonald and Dwayne Strickland. Strickland was granted early parole and was recently released from prison, a tradeoff he received for betraying his fellow inmates.
The three figures create a volatile situation when the body of Mary Stewart a young teenage girl who had been missing for five days, is suddenly discovered in Strickland’s home. Dwayne believes Tony can help him with this difficult situation because of their past history in the prison system, but Tony’s situation is complicated by his relationship with Caddy Stewart, the dead girl’s grandmother. Neil MacDonald joins this heady mix, the hard-nosed ex-cop who says everyone knows who the killer is and demands justice, ready to turn innuendo, rumour and speculation into evidence against Strickland to reach his predetermined conclusion.
MacIntyre points out that when disaster strikes, people are shaken, tension and passion drives their behavior and their first instinct is vengeance. His writing is well paced, pushing the story steadily forward so readers keep turning the pages, encountering a number of twists, betrayals and surprises. And when he reaches the final pages, he does not tie the story up in a neat package, but instead leaves what eventually happens in the lives of two men open to speculation. Like life itself, we don’t always know what will happen.
The narrative presents a realistic picture of the prison system, one we know is failing at what it was set up to accomplish. Despite mission statements, goals and good intentions, it has never delivered in its stated purpose of rehabilitation. Instead, it has become a place where inmates are isolated and dehumanized and when their time is done, they are released back into the world and expected to act like contributing citizens. The system is a product of the people who run it. They have their own assumptions about crime, the potential of rehabilitation and beliefs about their security and that of the communities they serve. It is a system that simply doesn’t work.
MacIntyre has created great characters in the three men at the heart of the novel. Dwayne Strickland is a cocky, overconfident man with a high opinion of himself and unrealistic beliefs about the way the world works. Tony Breau is the embodiment of reason, a man who understands that people are neither good nor evil and that their behavior is based on reasons that are complicated. He has been there, inhabited that space when he responded emotionally to tragedy and became party to extreme injustice. He knows that in a crisis, even reasonable people can be led to endorse or participate in irrational or criminal behavior. Neil MacDonald is a man who lives with his own brand of certainty about life, relationships, criminals, justice and rehabilitation, ready to use whatever means necessary including violence, to ensure his view is enacted.
For Tony, Neil and Dwayne, going home does not always bring what they hoped it would. Like every other place, everyone in St. Ninian has his own agenda.
MacIntrye’s novel shows the complex issues that confront the criminal justice system. He makes them understandable by wrapping them in a plausible story about ordinary people living ordinary lives in an ordinary place who have been shaken by a tragic death. He shows how these usual law-abiding people, without objective information and driven by emotion, can easily become vigilantes, because when people feel wronged, they naturally push for retribution and punishment. His story also shows how people who have similar experiences, may come to completely different conclusions about crime, punishment and justice.
With remarkable insight, MacIntrye includes the emerging news of a global conflict alongside his story of what happened in a little place in the middle of nowhere. It shows how events such as those in this story do not just occur in what some may consider to be a small, backward place but enlarges the discussion, to show how such events are repeated everywhere.
This is a book about crime, but it is not a crime story. It is a morality driven narrative about a crisis of conscience, a story of betrayed friendships, adultery and withholding the truth, a story about circumstances, choices made, roads taken and compromises made.
It is well told and a novel I highly recommend.