South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

‘Lullaby Road’ treacherou­s for trucker, unlikely cargo

- By Oline Cogdill Oline H. Cogdill can be reached at olinecog@aol .com.

The road stretches long — and hard — in a remote area of Utah that trucker Ben Jones has been traveling nearly 20 years. It’s not exactly a Jack Kerouac road trip as this bleak stretch of road known as Route 117 is filled with treacherou­s curves, unpredicta­ble weather and people more eccentric and peculiar than any beat poet imagined.

As he did in his 2015 debut, “The Never-Open Desert Diner,” James Anderson delivers an unconventi­onal mystery melding near lyrical prose with a strong sense of atmosphere and an affinity for oddball characters — even the most outlandish are believable. A sense of the menacing hangs over the plot of “Lullaby Road,” and when violence erupts, it’s expected, yet still surprising.

“Lullaby Road” works well as a story about isolation, loss, parenting and predators.

In this story, Ben is putting diesel in his rig when the manager of the Stop ‘n’ Gone Truck Stop tells him that something has been left for him at the eighth fuel island. The “something” turns out to be a child about 5 or 6 years old with a note pleading for Ben to take the youngster named Juan because of “Bad Trouble.”

The child is accompanie­d by a large protective white dog. Ben has no intention of taking the child, and especially not the dog. But the weather has turned frigid and the seedy truck stop manager isn’t an option. His nextdoor neighbor further complicate­s his passenger list by insisting that he take her infant daughter along; her baby sitter is sick and

the new mother has to be at her job at Walmart.

So begins Ben’s most unusual trek, making his deliveries of water, food, mail and supplies to farflung homes of those who relish the remoteness. Along the way, Ben comes across his friends, preacher John who drags a life-size crucifix along the highway, a state trooper who’s on duty only if he wears his hat and an ex-coal miner

who survives with odd jobs. But danger rears up as Ben dodges a speeding semi that almost crashes into him and as he eludes people with guns.

The child and the dog hold the key to painful secrets.

Anderson evocativel­y illustrate­s the beauty and harshness of Utah’s high desert while also delving deep into the characters and their motives for living where they do. The product of foster homes, the flawed and fascinatin­g Ben just tries to get by each day, doing the right thing, while relishing the terrain’s vastness, “drawn toward it, into it, like it was some crazy lover forever promising passion and never love.”

Meet the author

James Anderson will discuss “Lullaby Road” at 7 p.m. Nov. 7 at Murder on the Beach, 273 Pineapple Grove Way, Delray Beach, 561-279-7790, murdermb@gate.net.

 ?? KAREN R. KARGEL ?? James Anderson’s new mystery is “Lullaby Road.” He’ll be at Murder on the Beach in Delray Beach on Nov. 7.
KAREN R. KARGEL James Anderson’s new mystery is “Lullaby Road.” He’ll be at Murder on the Beach in Delray Beach on Nov. 7.
 ??  ?? ‘Lullaby Road’ By James Anderson. Broadway Books, 305 pages, $16
‘Lullaby Road’ By James Anderson. Broadway Books, 305 pages, $16

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