Don't ask me why but this book made me think of James Dickey's "Deliverance" — the theme song from the movie kept going through my head.
Maybe because this book has that kinda of vibe, even though it's set in western Massachusetts. But rural rednecks aren't that different wherever their roots are as this tale would have it.
Hogan, who penned "Prince of Thieves" as his debut ( it became Ben Affleck's "The Town"), has a fine sense for creating atmosphere, totally believable situations and quirky characters.
Don Maddox returns to Black Falls, the town he couldn't leave fast enough 15 years ago when he won a college scholarship. Now, he's a part-time patrolman with no law experience on a police force that no one wants to answer a 911 call, a job he won with the help of his one-time mentor, the head selectman and the former police chief.
Its a dying paper mill town, a quiet town, until the peace is shattered when a resident is brutally murdered and a local sex offender goes missing.
In a town with 2 full-time cops and a couple of part-timers whose uniforms are embroidered T-shirts and ball caps, Maddox is increasingly pressed into service to investigate mischief, mayhem, drugs, domestics, and other crimes.
There's a lot of voices here, but they all stand out in some way, and add to the story, from the deaf llama farmer and her daughter, to the wife of one of the full-time cops, Maddox's only competition for that scholarship that got him out of town.
Then the violence ramps up, the staties come in, and ugly secrets of some of Black Falls' 1,200 denizens start coming to light, including Maddox's.
A gritty, character-driven thriller.