For some reason, I have never gotten into the stories of Jeffrey Campbell, AKA Jeffrey Caine, AKA Campbell Black; this is my third novel of his and I struggled to finish it. Here, our main protagonist Kenner starts the novel driving to Upstate New York from the City to see his daughter; she is now married and living in Chilton, NY. Kenner is a city boy and really hates the small town of Chilton and cannot imagine why his daughter is attracted to it, or her relatively new husband.
Campbell presents Chilton as a quasi Stepford; everyone who lives there seems to love it and be content, polite and insipid. Kenner is something of a smartass, with lots of quips, mostly insulting, to the 'natives'. He has also been having nightmares about Chilton and his daughter, often associated with brutal headaches, and sometimes these dreams create either a strong sense of déjà vu or seem to foreshadow upcoming events. In any case, Kenner is very unsettled to say the least and really dislikes bucolic Chilton. His daughter was an aspiring grad student who went to follow up a study her academic mentor did in Chilton over a decade ago and then suddenly dropped out of school, burned her notes, and married a local. WTF? Kenner just wants his (formerly) outgoing and strong daughter back. Something seems very fishy about Chilton and Kenner is determined to sort it out; he is an investigator for an insurance company after all...
I felt Campbell tried way to hard here to create a sense of foreboding here and Kenner came off as some kind of asshole, making it pretty hard to root for as the mystery unfolded. Strained dialogue and uneven pacing; as the novel progressed, it became more and more a chore for me rather than exciting and spooky. YMMV however; it might just be that Campbell and myself do not click. 1.5 stars, rounding up as I finished it.