As much as I enjoy reading the Dave Robicheaux crime canon for its atmospheric rendering of the Louisiana bayou, I'm occasionally pulled up short by its tough-guy police-beat dialog -- ''queer bait", "brain pan", etc. -- too purple for its purpose and ill-suited to Robicheaux's quiet dignity. But we don't see purple here. In this early Burke fiction set in and around Harlan county in eastern Kentucky, the descriptive writing is by turns spare and lyrical, the earthy exchanges articulate and scaled to brevity by the urgency and desperation of the characters.
'To the Bright and Shining Sun' is the story of Coal Country, USA, where miners work dangerous jobs for low wages, drink bad local hootch and, like Tennessee Ernie Ford, owe their souls to the 'Company Store'. Through the eyes of young Perry James, we see a community struggling, at every turn, with difficult choices or no choices at all. For those like James, caught in the cycle of poverty, a personal code of conduct is often the only peg upon which to build self-esteem but, as James soon discovers, that code first must be squared with tribal loyalties and the kind of raw anger that can take him no place good.
In this rendering of life in the hollows of the Cumberland plateau, each man -- and woman -- seems locked-down in their own private crucible. Perry wants to leave Kentucky for the better life getting union scale wages as an earthmover in Ohio, but knows he's honor-bound, despite the risk, to avenge the attack on his father by scabs and company men; Perry's Mom feels loathe to part with her two malnourished kids but as the money runs out, she comes quickly to the idea keeping them will shorten their lives; the pawnshop owner sells guns for a living but, fearing for Perry's life, endeavors to halt him from making a purchase. And then there's the sheriff: he may extend every common courtesy to a suspected felon but the lawman knows where to draw the lawful line because he's calculated it so many times before. These are folks just as tough as the criminal element found in Robicheaux's New Iberia or the Big Easy. They know exactly the lay of the land because they have thought long and hard on its daily moral challenges.
TTBASS is set in the sixties. It would only be a few years before miners not unlike James would begin to fully grasp how automation and especially destructive mountain-top-removal (MTR) mining accelerate job loss. They already understood all too well the impact of union busting, unsafe working conditions, river pollution and black lung disease on their lives. On Nov. 21, 2016, TCM airs 'Harlan County, USA', the 1976 Oscar winning film documentary on the plight of striking miners in eastern Kentucky. Haven't seen it but it's probably worth a look. How much progress has been made since those days? Per 2013 U.S. census data, of 3,143 counties in the United States, Harlan County ranked 3,139 in the longevity of both male and female residents. According to a recent report in the New York Times (June 6, 2016), the coal industry, hit hard by a recent string of major bankruptcies, is currently on the hook for a billion-dollar coal-related clean-up operation -- mostly in Appalachia -- that, due to market forces and financial hardship, may well be beyond its reach. It would be nice to think the new pro-coal anti-regulatory administration will have the decency to continue to hold the coal industry accountable for this terrible scarring of the land, the water and the people of the Appalachian mining community. I just wouldn't bet on it. Perry had the right idea from the start