I've never had a burning desire to go to Alaska. If someone administered a
word-association test to me and said the word "Alaska," my immediate
response
would be "cold." I get enough of that living in Ohio. My wife has been
there
and keeps talking about how beautiful it looks from a cruise ship. Sorry.
I've been getting a little nudge at the edge of my brain, however, a
little
itch that says "Hmmm." What put it there is a short but intense novel by
John
Straley entitled COLD WATER BURNING.
Straley is well-regarded in mystery circles, which makes it hard for me to
confess that I was unfamiliar with him before reading COLD WATER BURNING.
This is Straley's sixth novel featuring Cecil Younger, a down-at-the-heels
private investigator in the trapper and tourist town of Sitka, Alaska.
Younger has been evolving over the course of the past six years or so, and
COLD WATER BURNING finds him living with his girlfriend Jane Marie, her
infant daughter, and his not-quite-autistic friend Todd. He is also
maintaining sobriety after years of alcohol abuse and trying to eke out an
existence in a setting where such a task is by no means easy, particularly
for a private investigator who, by his own admission, is not a very good
one.
He is, however, good enough.
In COLD WATER BURNING Younger finds himself haunted by the circumstances
of a
grisly case he was involved with several years previously. Younger had
been
part of a legal team defending Richard Ewers, a deckhand accused of
murdering
four people aboard the scow Mygirl and setting it ablaze. Ewers was found
not
guilty of the murders, due in no small part to Younger's efforts, but the
cloud of suspicion has continued to hang over him. Now Ewers has
disappeared,
and his wife believes someone has taken revenge. Younger is initially
reluctant to become involved. However, when Ewers is killed in a police
shootout, and two other people involved in the case die in separate
incidents, it appears that someone is taking dramatic steps to either
bring
rough justice to the matter or to conceal the truth behind the unsolved
Mygirl
murder case --- or, perhaps, to do both. Younger, due to his prior
involvement in the matter, finds himself drawn into the circumstances in
spite of himself. In doing so, he finds that he has put not only himself,
but
those he loves, in mortal danger. He also finds himself slowly reaching
the
conclusion that a lifelong friend, a person whom he has always trusted,
may
have betrayed that trust. It is soon clear that no matter how the case is
resolved, Younger's view of his world --- and the people in it --- will be
changed forever.
Straley, himself a resident of Sitka, is an absolute master at weaving his
surroundings into the fabric of this masterfully told and compelling
story.
Younger is real; he is still dealing with the consequences of addiction
and
the circumstances of his past, and if he doesn't always do so well, it
makes
his story all the more true-to-life. Straley also gives his readers little
bits and pieces of the sociology and uniqueness of Alaska, a state most
Americans know only by repute.
Again, I have read only one of the Younger novels. But I was reminded
repeatedly of Ross MacDonald's Archer novels. This is not to say that
Straley
copies MacDonald's style --- Straley's voice is uniquely his own --- but
rather that he captures, as does MacDonald, a unique place and time within
the context of an intriguing story as seen through the eyes of a complex
character.
--- Reviewed by Joe Hartlaub