Warnings: child abuse, implied child sexual abuse, kidnapping, sex slavery, sexual assault (attempted rape, implied rape), racial slurs, alcohol and tobacco abuse, physical violence (assault, branding), PTSD, mentions of war, mentions of slut-shaming, discussion of stolen generation of Native Americans
Rep: The protagonist is a Native American woman (OwnVoices)
Set roughly in the 60s, this novel about a young Native American girl in college who gets caught up in a missing persons case. I was through about a third of the book when I realized (from external sources) that this book isn't the first in the series. However, it fills in the blanks enough and gives plenty backstory that it doesn't feel like you are missing out on any story. Now, it is not exactly a mystery but instead has more of noir vibe, if you know what I am saying? For a lot of the book, it is just setting up the atmosphere and dips lightly into the mystery of the missing girls, and the actual 'mystery' comes in the last quarter.
Renee 'Cash' Blackbear is a freshman in college, and she makes a living working a beet truck and at the pool tables. She is clever and tests out the beginner classes she is taking; she also faces microaggressions with the college staff constantly underestimating her. When she hears about her missing classmate, she contacts and informs her previous guardian and only parental figure, the sheriff of her town. While he is looking into the matter, she is searching for answers in her dreams where she can astrally project her consciousness over her neighboring towns. The sudden arrival of her long-lost brother (who is a veteran of the Vietnam war) in her life also changes her a bit, making her think back on the families she was passed around in, the abuse she suffered, and the simple fact that she doesn't know what to do when she is being cared for, for a change. In between the lines and overtly, there is also discussion of how Native American children done wrong by the government, the situation with the movement asking for civil rights, sex slavery, the Vietnam war, and just the life in farming communities.
Most of the book is about her daily routine; now this actually sets the mood and atmosphere for the book, and describes her characterization without actually putting words to it. But then again, sometimes the book overdoes that and we get unnecessary details of her day-to-day tasks, like her waking up, getting ready, going to college, going straight to the farms after college or the bar to play pool or the rec center to play pool; these take up a bulk of the book, and since it all just repeats and repeats they all feel insignificant by the end. Three-fourths of this book is just describing her actions, and they get boring after the first couple of times, because nothing is actually happening with the plot while words are getting wasted on a mystery that doesn't even bother to leave out clues. When she finally gets to the cities, and the time comes for her to save those girls, that is only when the plot feels like it has picked up to go somewhere.
So, while this is a nice character-centric book, as a mystery or crime novel, it leaves much to be desired.
Received an advance reader copy in exchange for a fair review from Cinco Puntos Press, via Edelweiss.