ANOTHER MAN’S GROUND by Claire Booth: Book Review
Hank Worth has been sheriff of Branson, Missouri, for less than a year, but it’s re-election time in the county. That’s because Hank was appointed to the job, not elected, when his predecessor gave up the position with less than a year to go in his term to become a state senator. And if there’s anything that Hank dislikes more than criminals in his county it’s running for office.
He almost welcomes the phone call from Vern Miles, a landowner who calls Hank to ask him to view the trees on the Miles’ property that have been stripped of bark nearly to the top of their trunks. Vern tells the sheriff that it has recently been discovered that there’s big money in the outermost layer of the slippery elm; it’s used to cure a variety of ailments. (Seriously. I looked it up on Google, and the bark of the Ulmus rubra is used as an herbal remedy for fevers, wounds, and sore throats.) It’s bringing in much needed revenue, Vern informs Hank, but stripping the trees so high will likely result in the trees’ death, and he wants whoever did this caught.
So, Hank thinks, “This was excellent. A nice little crime to investigate, but with no trauma, no violence.” It turns out that nothing could be further from the truth.
The Miles’ property touches the land that belongs to the Kinney clan, and both families have been feuding for at least three generations. The Kinneys are the most powerful family in the county, for reasons Hank is finding hard to understand. His barber, Stan, finally comes the closest to putting it in words: “They own people’s minds….It’s better just to move around with caution and respect when it comes to them.” And when Hank makes a return visit to the woods and finds even more bare trees, this time on the Kinney property, he knows he’s going to have to face Jasper Kinney sooner rather than later.
At the same time, Hank is trying to keep his job as sheriff despite his distaste for the political machinations necessary to run a campaign. His initial meeting with Darcy Blakely, his campaign manager, does not go well. Added to that is the fact that his competition, Gerald Tucker, has been a long-time deputy in the sheriff’s department, while Hank is still an outsider by Missouri standards. Plus, in Hank’s opinion, Gerald is much too involved with Henry Gallagher, the area’s most successful businessman. Hank is pretty sure Henry is involved in arson, extortion, and insurance fraud, even though he’s been unable to prove it. But Henry’s pockets are deep, and he definitely could sway voters toward Gerald.
Then a teenage undocumented worker is found hiding in the woods, and there’s an unidentified corpse there as well. So Hank’s “nice little crime” is no longer nice or little.
Claire Booth’s second novel is an excellent follow-up to The Branson Beauty, which I blogged about in July 2016. The characters, including Hank, his physician wife, and his African-American deputy, make the story real and compelling. Another Man’s Ground is well worth another visit to Branson, Missouri.
You can read more about Claire Booth at this website.
Check out the complete Marilyn’s Mystery Reads at her website.