While this review did run last month,
this is publication day, so I am running it again today. I am also adding the link to Lesa Holstine's recent review at the bottom of mine.
Shifty’s Boys
by Chris Offutt picks up a bit after The
Killing Hills and begins with the local taxi driver, Albin, finding
a body. At first, he thinks he has found somebody passed out from drinking way
too much. Has happened before in Rocksalt, Kentucky, so he is not very concerned
as he sees the odd shape up against the fence in the parking lot of the local
Western Auto. It is only when he gets out of the cab and walks towards the male
figure, he realizes that it is not mud on the man’s clothes, but blood.
Mick Harden is home on medical leave thanks to an
IED attack that nearly killed him. It didn’t. Getting divorced, once he signs
the paperwork, might kill him. The pain pill addiction he has might as well.
Staying at his mom’s house, now owned by his sister, Linda Hardin, the sheriff,
might also kill him. While she cares about him, they don’t get along that well
in the best of times, With him home on medical leave and dealing with pain,
grief, and trauma, and her running for election, these certainly are not the
best of times.
He does not know it, but he really needs a project
to do while he continues his painful rehab for his leg injury. Mick thinks too
much and he needs something to do that will fully occupy his mind as he works
to rehab the leg, wean himself off the painkillers, and deal with moving
forward.
That project will soon be investigating the death at
Western Auto on behalf of Mrs. Kissick. It was her son, Barney, who was found
dead. While Mick and Mrs. Kissick, also known as “Shifty,” have history and
were not on very good terms the last time they spoke, she needs help. She wants
Mick because she knows that his being a miliary cop will come in handy as the
case is stagnated.
Local police know that drugs probably were involved,
but beyond that, they have zero clues or any ideas as to what happened. Shifty knows
full well that drugs might have been involved as that is the family business.
She also knows that it was not a drug deal gone wrong, like the local police
think, as Barney never did business in the city. They had a rule about that.
The city cops figure a drug dealer got what he had
coming and can’t be bothered to do much at all to find the killer or killers.
Shifty is enraged, has money, and wants to hire Mick to find out who did it and
why. She figures Mick, who grew up with her sons, will be able to do so. Mick
agrees to poke around a little bit and soon figures out that there is a lot
going on in Shifty’s Boys.
While this read does tie into the first book, The
Killing Hills, this one easily could be read as a standalone. A complicated
read full of interesting characters that are doing what they need to do
survive, there is a lot of grey here in terms of morality and temporary
alliances. As in the previous read, the author’s obvious love for the land and
the people of the region comes through loud and clear.
Like The Killing Hills, Shifty’s Boys is well worth your time.
For another take on the book, make sure you head over to Lesa's Book Critiques where Lesa Holstine reviewed it here.
My reading copy came by way of a digital ARC from
NetGalley.
Kevin R. Tipple ©2022
3 comments:
Shifty's Boys is definitely worth the time!
Thank you for linking to my review, too, Kevin.
Of course.
If you enjoyed Shifty, try Jordan Harper's The Last King of California. I received a copy from Netgalley's UK arm. Just trying to spread some word about the book because he is having difficulty getting it published in the US (on top of that, he has a second book he is delaying until The Last King gets published in the US).
I have no ties to Jordan Harper, it is just irritating the US seems to avoid books this good and that he seems to be getting the Adrian McKinty treatment.
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