For the full
list of reading suggestions today, make sure you head over to Patti’s blog.
MISCHIEF IN MAGGODY
(1988) by Joan Hess
Reviewed by Barry
Ergang
The second novel in Joan
Hess’s comical mystery series, Mischief
in Maggody is primarily but not exclusively concerned with the
disappearance and eventual murder of Robin Buchanon, one of many of the Buchanon
clan inhabitants of Maggody, Arkansas, population 755: “There are hundreds of
them sprinkled across Stump County, worse than hogweed. Incest and inbreeding
are their favorite hobbies…They aren’t strong on intelligence; the most they can
aspire to is animal cunning. An anthropologist from Farber College once tried
to sort out the genealogy, although nobody ever figured out why anybody’d want
to do that. Rumor has it she tried to kill herself at the county line, and
ranted in the ambulance about third cousins twice removed and fathers who were
also uncles and half-brothers. Her family hushed it up with some story about a
diesel truck, but everybody in Maggody knew better.”
Ariel “Arly” Hanks, who was raised here but
eventually married, moved to Manhattan, ultimately divorced, and moved back to
Maggody where she has become Chief of Police, has quite a number of problems to
contend with, not the least of which in her current case, is the well-being of loose-morals
moonshiner Robin Buchanon’s five children, one of whom is an infant.
Arly and/or the reader will
also encounter—via first- and third-person viewpoints—in no particular order—Madame
Celeste, a psychic who may or may not be phony; Celeste’s brother, obliging
Mason Dickerson; Brother Verber, preacher at the Voice of the Almighty Lord
Assembly Hall; school counselor David Allen Wainwright; Arly’s mother Ruby Bee
and Ruby’s friend Estelle Oppers; the
consummately inept Kevin Buchanon and his lady love, Dahlia O’Neill; student Carol
Alice Plummer and her “best friend in the whole world,” Heather Riley; and the
new hippie owners of the Emporium: Nate, Rainbow, Zachery and Poppy, the latter
being very pregnant. Extremely
memorable is Maggody’s mayoral wife and devout Christian known throughout as “Mrs.
Jim Bob,” and occasionally as Mizzoner,her husband Mayor Jim Bob being off in a
conference in Hot Springs.
A modern take on the
screwball comedy mystery that Craig Rice might have loved—albeit with some
implied sexuality and blatant raw street
language—the novel is one I can recommend to non-squeamish readers of
entertaining whodunits.
© 2019 Barry Ergang
As regular readers of this blog know, some of
Derringer-winner Barry Ergang’s work is available at Amazon and Smashwords. His free e-book Criminalities includes the essay “Impossible Pleasures,” about
impossible crime fiction.
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