Lost in the scenery
The Hush
John Hart
St. Martin’s Press Series, or sequels to a novel, work because the stories have a continuity that invests the reader in the characters’ next adventures. But the more that years pass, the less the momentum survives. That’s one of the drawbacks of The Hush, which picks up the story of Johnny Merrimon, introduced in John Hart’s Edgar-winning 2009 novel, The Last Child. In the previous novel, 13-year-old Johnny was obsessed with finding the man who killed his twin sister, Alyssa. The quest took Johnny into hearts of darkness no child should ever know about. In The Last Child, Johnny’s vivid character was comparable to Scout Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird.
The Hush picks up Johnny’s life 10 years later. While Johnny’s backstory isn’t too difficult to catch up with, The Hush is so disconnected to The Last Child that it barely works as a sequel. The decade has been difficult for Johnny, who became a minor celebrity whose exploits with a killer were detailed in a true-crime book. But the 23-year-old is now a nearhermit, whose infrequent visits to a small North Carolina town for supplies bring stares and speculation about “the darker currents that ran beneath” Johnny’s persona. Johnny is nearly penniless but land-rich, living on 6,000 acres called Hush Arbor that he inherited from a complicated deed. Hush Arbor once belonged to Isaac Freemantle, the first freed slave in Raven County. Many of Freemantle’s descendants are buried there, as are some of Johnny’s ancestors. But one of Freemantle’s relatives is challenging his ownership.
The Hush is strongest when Hart concentrates on the evocative setting, heightened by a strong sense of place with Hush Arbor. But the magical realism aspects do not resonate and become increasingly far-fetched. The beautiful North Carolina scenery is what readers will remember, not the characters. Johnny, so well-sculpted in The Last Child, is a mere shadow of himself here and Hart doesn’t delve deeply enough into his psyche.