Written in
response to the MeToo movement, Deadly Waters by Dot Hutchison (Thomas
& Mercer, 2020) captures the routine incursions that women face at work,
school, or anywhere they choose to go. The polemics in the book describe the
no-win conundrums surrounding women’s clothing, speech, dating, and freedom of
movement. “She
was smart, she was careful, she was sober, and none of it made any difference
when a man decided he was entitled to her time and attention.”
The party
hearty frat boys at the University of Florida in Gainesville are known for
their rapacious approach to the female students, who have learned they must be
vigilant at all times to avoid assault. Even so, some of the male students
leave a trail of injured and often drugged girls in their wake. Occasionally
one ends up hospitalized. Such was the case with Kasey, whose asthma was
triggered by a drunken attack at a party. The lack of oxygen left her in a coma
that is likely permanent. Her dorm suitemates are devastated, especially Ellie,
who tends to challenge would-be predators head on. She’s overwhelmed with guilt
that she was not at the party to protect Kasey. Gainesville police take a blame-the-victim
stance so punishment for confrontations lands squarely on Ellie, not the aggressive
young man or men. Ellie and her friends have been thrown out of countless bars
and parties because of Ellie’s take-no-guff response.
Someone is
tired of the pervasive assumption that women are the male students’ for the
taking and has begun feeding the worst offenders to the local alligators, who
are especially active during spring mating season. After the second incident,
the female students realize what is happening even though the Gainesville police
chief, Southern good old boy to the core, insists they are accidents. Suitemates
Rebecca and Hafsah are terrified that Ellie is behind it.
While Ellie’s
over-the-top style is hard to take, her friends love her and do not want to see
her in trouble. And there is strong sympathy for the executioner. There is a
growing degree of satisfaction among the women that someone has begun standing
up to these vicious thugs hiding behind Greek letters and family money. Open
messages of thanks are posted around campus with recommendations for the
killer’s next victim. When the police finally acknowledge the deaths as
murders, the trails are long cold.
The tight-knit relationships of the seven suitemates illustrate beautifully the close friendships that develop during college among the most unlikely of people. The revelation of the killer at the end was not much of a surprise. I found this book to be a highly satisfying, if somewhat startling, read. Recommended.
·
Publisher: Thomas & Mercer
(September 1, 2020)
·
Language: English
·
Paperback: 301 pages
·
ISBN-10: 1542005574
·
ISBN-13: 978-1542005579
Aubrey
Nye Hamilton ©2023
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
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