Andrew Welsh-Huggins is a legal affairs reporter for the
Associated Press in Columbus, Ohio. Welsh-Huggins is also the editor of Columbus
Noir (Akashic Books, 2020), and his short fiction has appeared in Ellery
Queen Mystery Magazine, Mystery Weekly, and Mystery
Tribune. He’s written seven mysteries about Andy Hayes, a former Ohio State
University quarterback turned private investigator. His nonfiction book No
Winners Here Tonight (Ohio University Press, 2009) is the definitive
history of the death penalty in Ohio. Hatred at Home: al-Qaida on Trial in
the American Midwest (Swallow Press, 2011) documents a lengthy government
investigation into terrorism that started in Columbus, Ohio. It provided the
basis for the fifth Andy Hayes mystery The Third Son (Swallow Press,
2018). The seventh in the series An Empty Grave (Swallow Press, 2021)
was reviewed on Lesa’s Book Critiques.
The second in
the series Slow Burn (Swallow Press, 2015) finds Andy precariously
balancing income and outgo. So when the grandmother of Aaron Custer, who was
accused of setting a fire in off-campus housing two years ago that killed three
students, says she’s heard there is a witness who can exonerate him and is
willing to pay Andy to find the witness, Andy agrees to look into it. Custer
pleaded guilty to avoid the death penalty, even though he was so drunk he has
no memory of the night, and is serving his sentence with no hope of early
release.
Andy is
skeptical but dutifully begins to dig around, uncovering a local drug gang who
objected to one of the dead students selling in their territory. Then there was
the seismic activity log he found that implicated one of the biggest fracking
companies in the state of Ohio. Some questions about Aaron’s inheritance from
his grandfather arose. Before Andy knew it, he established a range of
unexpected motives for the arson that were all outside Aaron’s knowledge and accountability.
Regional mysteries, mysteries that reflect the area and could not be set anywhere else, are among my favorite. Milan Jacovich in Cleveland, David Mapstone in Phoenix, Carlotta Carlyle in Boston, Rush McKenzie in St. Paul, Deb Ralson in Fort Worth, etc. I am pleased to add another Midwestern series to my list. The university in the background adds an academic flavor to the story. Andy is not a particularly original character but the people around him are, and the plots are innovative. Strong writing and sound pacing round out a well-conceived and -executed series. Recommended reading.
·
Publisher: Swallow Press
(April 15, 2015)
·
Language: English
·
Hardcover: 312 pages
·
ISBN-10: 0804011605
· ISBN-13: 978-0804011600
Aubrey Hamilton ©2021
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on
Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
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