Once again, Burke creates villains who view avarice as a virtue, heedless of the damage they wreak on the environment and their fellow man. Again, he demonstrates how easily they corrupt the police and politicians. He returns to his themes of racism and the hijacking of Christianity by hateful bigots. And he continues his exploration of the nature of evil, asking us to consider whether its source are men who, as he once put it, make "a conscious choice to erase God's thumbprint from their souls," or whether it is truly the work of the devil.
In this novel, as in all of Burke's work, the past is ever present, haunting both his characters and the soul of the nation. The dead are always with us, he says, apparently meaning it literally. In "Light of the World," the specters of Nez Perce Indians slaughtered by the U.S. cavalry haunt the Montana ridges, and a troubled and selfless woman is the embodiment of a Christian martyr slaughtered in a Roman arena.
Dave and Clete's immediate nemesis is a homicidal maniac named Asa Surrette, who seeks revenge for a series of articles Alafair once wrote about him. But the killer is a pawn in the hands of powerful men whose greed knows no bounds.
As always, the law is corrupted and outgunned, and as the bodies pile up, Dave, Clete and their daughters recognize that if they want justice, they will have to get it for themselves.
The result is perhaps Burke's boldest and most complex novel to date, at once a superb crime story and a literary masterpiece from an author who has been named a Mystery Writers of America Grand Master.
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Bruce DeSilva, winner of the Mystery Writers of America's Edgar Award, is the author of "Cliff Walk" and "Rogue Island."
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Online:
http://www.jamesleeburke.com/
http://brucedesilva.com/