Texarkana Gazette

THESE WOMEN

- —OLINE COGDILL

by Ivy Pochoda; Ecco (352 pages, $27.99)

Ivy Pochoda finds beauty in the gritty side, hope where others see limited options and grace and strength in those who live on the margins as do the characters in “These Women,” the excellent fourth novel from this California author.

Loneliness, courage and the strength to go on swirl through the lives of “These Women,” each of whom Pochoda explores with compassion and empathy as they try to survive South Central Los Angeles’ mean streets.

At the center is fish shack owner Dorian Williams who

drifts through the days, mourning and haunted by the murder of her teenage daughter Lecia more than 15 years ago. Lecia allegedly was the last victim of a serial killer who was never captured and who targeted prostitute­s, which Lecia was not.

Dorian couldn’t save her daughter, so she tries to help others such as Julianna, for whom Lecia used to babysit. Now Julianna cobbles together out a living as a cocktail waitress, part-time exotic dancer and quasi-prostitute, daily dreaming of a better life as a photograph­er yet ruled by her drug habit and an addiction to hard living. Despite her intelligen­ce and insight, the diminutive LAPD detective Essie Perry has more in common with “These Women” than she lets on. At work, Essie sees “circles and patterns” in crimes that her colleagues don’t, yet too often her theories are dismissed.

Feelia Jefferies knows too well how violence can permeate lives — she may be the only survivor of that serial killer. Performanc­e artist Marella Colwin often moved from one war-torn country to another with her parents, “but Los Angeles was the only place where they seemed afraid.” These women, among others, are driven by fear that the serial killer has resurfaced.

The women’s connection­s to each other deliver layers of insight to the plot of “These Women.” Pochoda delves deep to explore each woman’s psyche while finding the humanity in the smallest details such as Dorian’s care in preparing fried shrimp and chicken to feed the prostitute­s who gather daily behind her food shack.

Essie wants each person to matter, but too often “These Women” are ignored — “a disrespect almost worse than murder,” thinks another character.

Pochoda’s fine character studies have imbued each of her four novels, taking another leap forward in the stunning “These Women.”

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