Football is king in Texas. Especially high school
football where the highlight of many a life might be beneath the lights on a
Friday evening. Back in the day just before the first Gulf War, Jack Hardin was
quarterback of the Jarrett Creek High School Panthers and he was the man. He
might have had a spectacular college career. Instead, both Jack and Woody
Patterson signed up to enlist in the Army not knowing a war was coming.
What had been a relatively simple love triangle
between Jack, Woody and a certain hometown beauty changed when the Army
rejected Woody and Jack left alone off to war. While Woody and the lady in
question got married, Jack eventually came back badly damaged physically and
emotionally. Blind, crippled and confined to a wheelchair, abandoned by his mom
and many others, Jack primarily relies on his father Bob Harbin to take care of
him. The same Bob Harbin who just died of an apparent heart attack on the
street in front of his house in the opening pages of The Last Death Of Jack Harbin: A
Samuel Craddock Mystery by Terry Shames.
As he was in A Killing At Cotton Hill Samuel
Craddock, retired police chief, is the only real person around with actual law
enforcement experience and training. Not that he has any mind to get involved
as this second book in the series set in small town south Texas begins. Events
of the last book (reviewed here) are still present in minds of many folks as well as in his own.
Then there is the whole issue of his knee, which is going to have to be
operated on, as well as a couple of other things.
But, the chief of police is a drunk, his number two
man isn’t much better, and those in charge want him involved. An involvement
which becomes more and more important as other events begin to happen and old
secrets begin to see the light of day. The past may have been buried, but it
coming back to life and taking a heavy toll on the town folk of Jarrett Creek,
Texas in so many ways.
Reminiscent of Bill Crider’s excellent Sheriff
Dan Rhodes series, albeit with far less humor, Samuel Craddock is a man
you would be honored to have as a friend. Straight forward and plainspoken, he
quietly goes about his business asking questions and doing a lot of listening
to what is said and not said. While there are the action moments
including a shootout in town, most of the book is Craddock keeping business low
key in both his daily life as well as in his investigations. These books are a
series with characters that quickly grow on you and stories that are well worth
your time.
The
Last Death Of Jack Harbin: A Samuel Craddock Mystery
Terry
Shames
Seventh Street Books (imprint of
Prometheus Books)
January 2014
ISBN# 978-1-61614-871-3
Paperback (also available as an
e-book)
250 Pages
$15.95
Material received from the publisher
for my use in an objective review.
Terry Shames is a recently featured
author over at Jenny Milchman’s “Made It Moment” series. You can and should
read the interesting piece here.
You can also read an interesting
interview with Terry over at MysteryPeople here.
Kevin R. Tipple ©2014
2 comments:
I always enjoy reading your reviews after I've read and enjoyed a book. I like to see your comments about it, Kevin. Good to know you like this series as much as I do. I really like Shames' characters. And, I appreciate the links to other sites pertaining to the author or book. Thanks!
Really like the books big time. I think she has an author signing down in Dallas Tuesday evening too.
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