The Telegram (St. John's)

‘Darktown’ has intense plot

- BY OLINE H. COGDILL

Atlanta during the postSecond World War years was a city on the cusp of change: “Neither city nor country but some odd combinatio­n” writes Thomas Mullen as he sets the scene in his gripping novel “Darktown,” which succinctly, and often uncomforta­bly, explores racism.

The mayor’s order to integrate Atlanta’s police force in 1948 doesn’t sit well with the old-guard that’s male — and white. Eight new black officers are allowed to wear the uniform but cannot make an arrest unless a white officer is present.

“Darktown” also is a complicate­d crime fiction that melds an intense plot with fully realized characters.

At times, Mullen’s unflinchin­g descriptio­n in exploring the bigotry and hatred the rookie officers experience make “Darktown” an upsetting read. Yet this authentici­ty adds to the realism and relevance of “Darktown,” bringing to mind 2016 confrontat­ions between police and blacks.

War veterans Lucius Boggs and Tommy Smith, along with their six colleagues, joined the Atlanta force because it offered the best jobs. After three months on the force, Boggs and Smith come across Brian Underhill, a drunken white ex-cop who has just crashed into a lamppost with his passenger, Lily Ellsworth, a young black woman.

The white policemen who arrive on the scene allow Underhill to leave without charging him. But a few days later, Lily is found murdered.

“Darktown” briskly moves as the plot delves into racial tensions and Second World War veterans returning to civilian jobs.

Although set a couple of decades before the civil-rights movement, “Darktown” is a harbinger of how attitudes and opportunit­ies will be changing.

 ??  ?? Darktown: a Novel By Thomas Mullen Atria/37Ink 384 pages; $15.39
Darktown: a Novel By Thomas Mullen Atria/37Ink 384 pages; $15.39

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