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Monument

ebook
1 of 2 copies available
1 of 2 copies available

Richmond is shut down and masked up amid the COVID pandemic. Then, Black Lives Matter outrage evolves into an attack on the Confederate monuments that have long been despised by much of the city population. What else could happen? Willie Black, night police reporter for the local daily, knows there's always something. On the first night of what will turn out to be a season of reckoning in the former capital of the Confederacy, cops investigating an unlocked door on a riot-ravaged stretch of Broad Street find something they didn't expect. A husband and wife who own a second-hand bookstore have been brutally murdered. Is it an offshoot of the rage that sprung up unexpectedly in the city that one veteran observer was fond of referring to as a hotbed of rest? It doesn't take long for the police to find an obvious prime suspect—a mildly autistic college student who had been befriended by the couple and who was caught by a video camera coming out of the bookstore not long after the murders occurred. Willie has more than the usual interest in the case, since the suspect is the son of the first of three ex-wives, who made a new life with a new husband after Willie split. As he digs deeper than Chief L.D. Jones and his police force would like, he soon has reason to doubt that the real killer is behind bars. The police have their hands full putting out literal and figurative fires and have little interest in pursuing a case they believe is already solved. Willie, though, has time (albeit his own, unpaid time as print journalism continues to circle the drain). Before he's through, he'll discover a story of a tragic mistake and the vengeance it spawned, vengeance that spills over into a city that's already maxed out on trouble

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from September 13, 2021
      The summer of Black Lives Matter protests provides the backdrop for Owen’s exceptional 11th mystery featuring Richmond, Va., newspaper reporter Willie Black (after Jordan’s Branch). As Willie focuses on vandalism and counterprotests regarding “the overabundance of Confederate statuary” along Monument Avenue, a middle-aged couple, the Kellers, are murdered in their home above their used bookstore. The reporter gets pulled into the story on a personal level when he learns his first wife’s 19-year-old son, who’s on the autism spectrum, was caught on a security camera leaving the crime scene and is now on the run. The daily tumult makes grudging allies of Willie and media-loathing police chief L.D. Jones, who must walk an especially fine line as “an African American police chief in a city where half the population and nowhere near half the money is Black.” In a city on edge, the chief is fired briefly and rehired, but Willie makes the most of Jones’s time out of office to dig deeper and find a plausible suspect from the Kellers’ past. The wild action that results from Willie’s successful flushing of the real killer is bracing and crisp, and the tragic coda shows that solving a terrible crime is no guarantee of a happy ending. Owen has outdone himself.

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Languages

  • English

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