Regina Leader-Post

Brutal plot not for faint of heart

- OLINE H. COGDILL

The “Little Egypt” region of Southern Illinois is among the state’s most diverse — with rich farmland near fallow soil, abandoned coal mines and beautiful parks, economical­ly depressed rural areas near at least two wellrespec­ted universiti­es. And in the hands of Jason Miller, Little Egypt also makes an intriguing backdrop for a gritty, hard-boiled novel that is unsparing in its view of its characters or location.

While Miller’s second novel certainly has the country environmen­t nailed down with vivid scenery and realistic dialogue, the plot sometimes is bogged down by a lead character that isn’t completely fleshed out. Attempts sometimes fall short to make Slim a quirky wiseacre.

Slim runs Redneck Investigat­ions from his home on “the dark throat of Shake-a-Rag Road” in Indian Vale, not far from the real LaRue-Pine Hills, which is in the breathtaki­ng Shawnee National Forest. The real manager of Slim’s business is Anci, his 13-year-old mystery-fiction loving daughter. The single father has learned to trust Anci’s common sense and business acumen, though lately work has been pretty slow, and their air conditione­r needs fixing. Slim’s last job was retrieving some stolen chickens, a case that turned out to be more involved than it should have been.

But he’s suspicious from the start about his new clients, the odd-looking Sheldon Cleaves and his son, A. Evans. They offer him $65 to bring back their “little one,” Shelby Ann Cleaves, who is a pit bull. They know that Shelby Ann was taken by Dennis Reach, who owns a nearby roadhouse. But bringing the dog home turns out to be a complicate­d descent into the worst denizens in Little Egypt, including racists, meth dealers, dogfightin­g ringleader­s, each more ruthless and murderous than the past.

Miller’s brutal plot is definitely not for the faint of heart, and he handles the story’s violence well, even when it is a bit over the top. A fine use of humour helps to balance Red Dog, but don’t mistake those bits of wit for a comic crime fiction in the vein of Tim Dorsey. Red Dog is more hard-boiled than humorous, and the story is at times uncomforta­ble.

Slim is easy to root for, but we want to know more about what makes him tick. Some of the strongest scenes are between him and whip-smart Anci. But Slim’s perpetual wisecracks grow weary and slow down the story.

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