The Day the Music
Died by Ed Gorman (Carroll & Graf, 1999) is the first of 10
books about Sam McCain, a lawyer in Black River Falls, Iowa. The small town
already has more lawyers than it can readily support so Sam ekes out a living
as an investigator for Judge Esme Anne Whitney, who shoots rubber bands at him
whenever they meet in her chambers. It’s February 1959, and Sam is stunned to
hear about the death of Richie Valens, the Big Bopper, and Buddy Holly in a plane
crash, just days after Sam took co-worker Pamela Forrest to what turned out to
be Buddy Holly’s last concert.
Judge Whitney pulls him away from participating in the
national mourning for the rock idol to look into the death of her ne’er-do-well
nephew’s wife. His task is complicated by the nephew’s suicide almost
immediately thereafter, which solves the case as far as Police Chief Cliff
Sykes is concerned. Sykes loathes Judge Whitney and her family and is delighted
for the opportunity to publicly humiliate them. When Sam takes Judge Whitney’s
part in believing the nephew is innocent, Sam also incurs the police chief’s
ire.
Sam’s personal life isn’t going much better. His teenage
sister is pregnant, afraid to tell their parents, and is wondering how to get
an abortion. Sam is terrified she will fall prey to a back-street abortionist
and doesn’t know what to do. The woman he loves, Pamela Forrest, is madly in
love with Stu Grant, who is engaged to someone else, while Mary Travers is
desperately in love with Sam, who isn’t especially interested in her, so she
has accepted the local pharmacist’s proposal of marriage, although she doesn’t
care about him. It is hard to understand just how so many mis-matches are
possible in such a small social circle.
This series incisively captures the cultural changes of the late
1950s and 1960s and their impact on countless small towns in the heartland of
the nation. In a sociological timeline it ranged from the death of Buddy Holly (“The
Day the Music Died”) through the civil rights movement and burgeoning feminism
to the Vietnamese conflict. Ed Gorman (1941-2016) grew up in Cedar Rapids, Iowa,
which informed his on-point descriptions of small-town life. He was a well-known
genre writer and short fiction anthologist and the recipient of multiple
literary awards. I consider this series some of the best of his very good work.
·
Hardcover: 212 pages
·
Publisher: Carroll &
Graf Pub; 1st Carroll & Graf ed edition (January 1, 1999)
·
Language: English
·
ISBN-10: 0786705698
·
ISBN-13: 978-0786705696
Aubrey
Hamilton ©2019
Aubrey
Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and
reads mysteries at night.
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