I debated on giving this book a 2-star rating but decided on 3-star mainly because my biggest objection to this book was what I expected versus what the book delivered. That may be my own fault.
Had the title been “The Minute Details of Our Small Town Life Including an Occasional Visit and Lots of Speculation of a Gangster” or “A Small Town Marshall: His Town and His Acquaintance with a Gangster”, the book may have been true to the title. As it was, I expected more of the gangster and much, much less of the community baseball games, boxing matches, church services, the locals and their specific health and money woes and those basic mundane activities in small town Iowa. Most of the book had absolutely nothing to do with the gangster in question, Louis La Cava. However, the author kept him as the theme by inserting snippets like how his car was seen by one town character, after an entire chapter about that characters’ life or La Cava’s name was seen in the newspaper by someone who was at a baseball game. That was a mention in the chapter that was dedicated to the baseball game. It was more like a ghost story. Louis La Cava, the gangster, was the ghost and he was a very shy one.
This story was much more about Oxbow, Iowa and the locals, than the gangster. Plus, Oxbox is not a real town. This story actually happened in Fairbanks, Iowa. Why change the name of the town? I read the real name of the town was not used on the advice of the author’s editor. I think that was bad advice. There is a map of Oxbox in the forward portion of the book. Is this really a map of Fairbanks or is that also completely made up? Do the incidents at the businesses described in the book that are shown on the map actually occur, or are those made up? And are the people whose lives the reader is exploring in detail also made up? The author admits some characters had to be created and the book is noted on the cover as being a historical novel but at the end, the author claims the story is TRUE. Most TRUE historical novels do provide an accounting of the real characters versus the imagined. We do not get that with this book.
I believe this book would be a real thrill for anyone from Fairbanks, Iowa. Also, the book was not poorly written at all, as a matter of fact, the author has a writing style I enjoy. It is a basic, simplistic and down to earth style with enough description that even everyday scenes can be of interest. So, it was not a bad read as it was written. It was simply not what I expected and the unexpected was not positive, in my opinion.