It has been a tough week physically
and emotionally, but I did manage to get a book read for FFB this week. Today I
offer you my review of OREGON HILL by Howard Owen. For more reading suggestions,
head over to Todd Mason’s Sweet Freedom
blog.
As Oregon Hill by Howard Owen begins, Will is back on the night
cop’s beat. He is luck he still has a job at the Richmond newspaper where he
has worked for many years. Lucky to have a job and not just because of the
status of the newspaper industry as a whole. He is lucky to have a job because his
own personal behavior has been pretty rocky in recent years on and off the job.
Mixed race with a serious drinking problem, a history of divorce, and a daughter,
Andi, who is at the local college with little direction in her life, Willie
Black, is a newspaper reporter trying to keep a job in a dying industry. He is
very much on old school reporter knowing he is one corporate mandated layoff
away from being homeless and without a job. In short, he is as close to rock
bottom as he can get, without actually hitting rock bottom.
Isabel Ducharme also attended classes at Virginia Commonwealth
University. Andi did not know her directly, but she sort of knew of her through
friends. She went to school there until somebody killed her and put her
headless body into the South Anna River. It might have gone away with no one
the wiser if not for the body getting snagged on a tree branch in the river.
It takes the cops two days to identify the killer who also confesses
very quickly. Martin Fell is in police custody and he very well may have done
the horrible crime. He is known to have spent time with Isabel in prior weeks
and there are witnesses that state they were together and arguing the night she
was murdered. He also confessed.
Willie Black thinks it is all wrapped up, but then an ex-wife of
his, Kate, who is a successful attorney about to make partner at her firm takes
on Mr. Fell’s case. He begins to learn things that indicate Mr. Fell may not
have done it. He begins to pursue the idea that Mr. Fell is innocent and that
puts him at odds with his newspaper bosses, the police, and just about everyone
he knows.
Oregon Hill by Howard Owen is a very good and
complicated start to this series featuring Willie Black. Along with the main
complicated mystery, there are several secondary storylines featuring the complicated
relationships he has with his mother and the current man in her life, his
daughter, and various other folks. These secondary storylines are in as much
rich detail as the primary storyline, making the nearly 240 page read a meaty
one with plenty to work through as the pages pass. Through it all, the main
mystery remains in focus to power much of the action forward.
Willie Black is a bit cynical, a bit sarcastic, and at all times a realist regarding everything around him. He sees the windmills, tilts at one or two anyway while being very self aware as to what he is doing, and keeps going forward through his days and nights as best as he can. You can’t ask for much more than that.
Willie Black is a bit cynical, a bit sarcastic, and at all times a realist regarding everything around him. He sees the windmills, tilts at one or two anyway while being very self aware as to what he is doing, and keeps going forward through his days and nights as best as he can. You can’t ask for much more than that.
Oregon Hill by Howard Owen is highly recommended.
Oregon Hill
Howard Owen
The Permanent Press
ISBN# 978-1-57962-208-4
Hardback (also available in audio, digital, and paper formats)
241 Pages
Material was received and read by way of the Interlibrary Loan
Program where a copy owned by the Houston Public Library System was shared with
the Dallas Public Library System.
Kevin R. Tipple ©2019
Howard Owen is a gem. Since I lived in Richmond most of my life, I'm fond of any series set there and this is one of the best.
ReplyDeleteReblogging this over at Buried Under Books.
https://cncbooksblog.wordpress.com/2019/06/15/book-review-oregon-hill-by-howard-owen/
Thank you.
ReplyDelete