Cory Anderson writes a beautifully lyrical and unforgettable novel set in a remote small town in the bone-chilling freezing and bleak wintry landscape of the Rockies. 17 year old Jack Dahl is bearing burdens no teenager should have to carry, his mother has been floating away from him and his younger brother, Matty, for some time with her opiate addiction, and has taken the final step to leave her family and life, by choosing to hang herself. His father, Leland, is incarcerated in prison for the robbery of a pawn shop, in reality the financial proceeds of the drug trade. Jack is left with no good choices when it comes to survival, he has barely any food or money, but he is willing to do whatever it takes to protect the adorable and vulnerable Matty, under threat of being taken away by social services. He buries his mother in the hard frozen ground, leaving him with sore, bloody and blistered hands.
Ava Bardem is the daughter of a father, Victor, a cruel, merciless and sadistic killer, whose love has wrapped Ava tightly into a cage where no-one is allowed to get close to her. When Jack helps her, the new girl, out of a distressing scenario at school, she tells him to stay away from her, harbouring secrets of a past that connects them. Left with no other options, Jack decides to seek the elusive briefcase of money hidden by his father so that he can financially provide food and a home for Matty, but can he trust anyone? This makes him the target, stalked by of a number of bad guys, including Victor, who will stop at nothing to get their hands on the loot, as the murder of a correctional officer is followed by a rising tide of dead bodies. Sheriff Doyle aware the boys are in desperate danger races against time to find them. As Jack's life hangs by a thread, the only person there for him and Matty is a Ava willing to burn the house down to keep them safe.
Anderson's writing is poetic, an artful if heartbreaking emotional rollercoaster of darkness, pain, despair and tragedies, young lives for whom hope is in short supply, where the poem Invictus by William Ernest Henley, is railed against, how is it possible for either Jack and Ava to be masters of their own fates and the captains of their souls? This was a superb and atmospheric read, so memorable, of uncommon intensity and vibrancy, although I found it difficult to continue at times, the never ending threats to life that hit Jack, Ava and Matty, but there are the rare shards of light, love and hope to delight in. This may well not be a book for everyone, but I loved it. Highly recommended! Many thanks to Penguin Random House for an ARC.