THE BITTERROOTS by C. J. Box: Book Review
The Bitterroots are a mountain range situated in western Montana and the panhandle of Idaho, part of the Rocky Mountain chain. In spite of its harsh-sounding name, it’s filled with natural beauty, featuring outstanding hunting, fishing, boating, and other outdoor activities. But in C. J. Box’s latest novel, its beauty hides pockets of corruption, greed, and self-enclosed communities with secrets they want to remain hidden.
Cassie Dewell, once a deputy sheriff, is now the founder of Dewell Investigations, LLC. As the novel opens she receives a phone call from Rachel Mitchell, a partner in a Missoula law firm, and a woman whom Cassie owes a favor. Rachel wants her to investigate everything about the arrest of Blake Kleinsasser, who has been accused of raping his niece Franny; Cassie’s initial response is “No way.”
The Kleinsasser family is the dictionary definition of dysfunctional. Blake, the eldest son of Horst and Margaret, is the only one who left the family ranch; in Kleinsasser terms, that’s treason and “the ultimate act of disloyalty.” Blake has had a successful career in New York City; after a long absence he returns home with the intention of helping his siblings sell the ranch, which he tells them is in their best financial interest. But his sister and two brothers don’t believe he came for unselfish reasons and say don’t want to sell the ranch at all.
Blake explains to Cassie and Rachel that many of his clan’s problems stem from the Kleinsasser Family Trust, a document drawn up by Blake’s grandfather. According to that document, everything must be left to the oldest son in each generation, which is Blake in this case. It is up to that son whether to keep the entire bequest or to share it with other family members. The only way that heir would not receive the entire bequest, which currently consists of the ranch, is to denounce the family name or by committing “moral turpitude.”
Blake admits to having been drinking heavily for several days before the alleged rape took place. He remembers picking up his niece from church that evening after she phoned him to do so, but he claims a total blackout about the rest of that night until the deputies came to arrest him the next morning.
The physical evidence against him appears overwhelming–his semen on Fanny’s underwear, his car’s tire tracks at the remote cabin where she told the deputies the attack took place, a whiskey glass at the cabin covered with Blake’s fingerprints–and then there’s Fanny’s testimony of what happened. But Cassie does owe Rachel a favor, a big favor from a previous case, so despite her near certainty about the client’s guilt she agrees to investigate.
Luchsa County, home to the Kleinsassers, seems to be totally in their grasp. It soon becomes apparent that the police and the courts are beholden to the family, thwarting Cassie’s efforts to discover the truth of what happened between Blake and his niece. But she perseveres, and little by little a story different from the original one gets uncovered.
C. J. Box is the author of more than twenty novels, including the best-selling Joe Pickett series. His mysteries have won the Edgar, Anthony, and Barry awards, among other prizes.
You can read more about C. J. Box at this website.
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