HARD CASH VALLEY by Brian Panowich: Book Review
Returning to McFalls County, Georgia is a painful experience. So much crime, so much brutality, so much pain. But Brian Panowich’s brilliant writing makes the visit worthwhile.
Dane Kirby is a former sheriff and former arson investigator who is still in love with his late wife. Gwen and their daughter were killed in an accident for which Dane blames himself, although no one else does. Although he’s retired from the two posts mentioned above he is still active in law enforcement, working part-time for the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. He’s enjoying being behind a desk for the first time in his professional life, rather than being out in the field, but that respite ends with a call from the county’s new sheriff.
A body has been found in the woods, and it looks as if the murderer has been found right away. It’s Ned Lemon, Dane’s former best friend, whom he hasn’t seen in ten years.
Back at the opening of Hard Cash Valley, a low-life criminal is congratulating himself on cleverly escaping with half a million dollars. Arnie Blackwell has carried the cash onto a plane, taken a taxi to a motel, and is nervously feeling better and more confident by the minute that he has eluded the men who want to capture him and his money.
That feeling remains with Arnie until he checks into the motel and is getting ready for a much-needed shower. When he opens the door to his room, expecting the bellboy delivering the towels he requested, he sees his worst nightmare in the doorway. As one of the men standing there tells him, they never even had to look for him. “We never lost you. All the way from that farm. We were sitting behind you on the plane.”
Arnie knows he has only minutes to live, and he gives up the name of his partner who is holding the other half of the money. He asks only one thing of the men. “Please don’t hurt Willie.”
Hard Cash Valley has multiple plot lines–murders, cockfighting, marital issues, debilitating illness, autism–but the brilliant writing of Brian Panowich pulls it all together. There are many bad guys, some worse than others; the not-always-cooperative relationships among local, state, and federal agencies; a man who cannot seem to leave his first marriage behind him to the detriment of his new relationship; and how even the sleaziest man can demonstrate caring for someone one more vulnerable than himself.
Hard Cash Valley is Brian Panowich’s follow-up to Like Lions; similar to that novel it’s a story that will tug on your heartstrings while keeping you turning the book’s pages as quickly as possible. A mystery, a love story (or more than one), a glimpse into the lives of children with autism–it’s all that and more. To sum up, it’s another outstanding work by a gifted writer.
You can read more about Brian Panowich at various sites on the web.
Check out the complete Marilyn’s Mystery Reads at her website. In addition to book review posts, there are sections featuring Golden Oldies, Past Masters and Mistresses, and an About Marilyn column that features her opinions about everything to do with mystery novels.