
Let Me Die in His Footsteps
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- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی

Starred review from April 13, 2015
The scents of Lavender and regret are heavy in this suspenseful coming-of-age novel centering on two generations of rural Kentucky women—and those unlucky enough to become enmeshed in their lives—from Edgar-winner Roy (Bent Road). The devastating tale alternates between chapters set in 1936 narrated by Sarah Crowley and chapters set in 1952 from the third-person
perspective of teenage Annie Holleran, whom Sarah has been raising as her daughter. But the key figure, never heard from directly, is Juna, Sarah’s younger sister (and Annie’s birth mother), a seductive,
sinister force responsible for sending one man to the gallows and a boy to his death. Gifted (or cursed) with Juna’s startling black eyes and a sixth sense country folk call “the know-how,” the spirited Annie has been making nearly everyone uneasy for as long as she can remember. Annie’s discovery of a dead body on a neighboring farm leads to the unearthing of long-buried, still-dangerous secrets. This powerful story inspired by the last legal public hanging in the U.S. should transfix readers right
up to its stunning final twist. Agent: Jenny Bent, Bent Agency.

The evocative atmosphere of this mystery is greatly enhanced by narrators Andi Arndt and Emily Woo Zeller. The story takes place in Kentucky, moving between Annie Holleran's story, set in 1952, and her mother Sarah's, set in 1936. Arndt and Zeller portray Annie as a mature young adult whose family is flawed--even creepy. They give Sarah's voice a soft Southern accent. The characters are often moody, but the author's subtle humor is also reflected in the performance. Part of the story features the Hollerans' switch from growing tobacco to growing lavender, and descriptions of that lovely scent adds much to the novel. The narrators' deceptively simple reading imparts realism to a complex and strange story. S.C.A. © AudioFile 2015, Portland, Maine
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