Los Angeles Times

Mystery ‘Heaven’ dives into Trump-era Texas

- By Paula L. Woods Woods is a book critic, editor and author of several anthologie­s and crime novels.

With “Black Water Rising,” Attica Locke staked a literary claim on Texas and the South a decade ago by providing a unique African American perspectiv­e on the region’s history of racial strife, politics and corporate skulldugge­ry.

Locke kicked it up a notch with 2017’s “Bluebird, Bluebird,” the first in a series that introduced Darren Mathews, a cop who quit law school to join the Texas Rangers after the real-life dragging death of James Byrd Jr. in 1998. Mathews’ deep love for Texas and ambivalenc­e about what it had become in the ramp-up to the 2016 election are powerful themes in “Bluebird.”

By its searing conclusion “Bluebird” had drawn Mathews into a legal and ethical morass as he tried to help family friend Rutherford “Mack” McMillan, accused of killing an Aryan Brotherhoo­d of Texas member. Twisted and suspensefu­l, “Bluebird” was a literary high-wire act that made one wonder if Locke could pull it off again in the Texas Ranger’s sophomore outing.

Her new book, “Heaven, My Home,” picks up soon after the events of “Bluebird,” but it reads like a standalone, filling in the “Bluebird” backstory quickly.

The plot of “Heaven, My Home” may be complex, but it’s worth every blistering word Locke puts on the page. Set in December 2016, the story starts four weeks after Donald Trump is elected, and Mathews is filled with rage over the election: “In an act of blind fury, white voters had just lit a match to the very country they claimed to love — simply because they were being asked to share it.”

His work on a combined FBI, ATF, DEA and Texas Rangers task force investigat­ing the Aryan Brotherhoo­d has kept Mathews at home in Houston, allowing his marriage much-needed time to heal. His lawyer wife’s profound lack of understand­ing of his love for the Rangers and his life on the road is a central source of strife.

Mathews’ conflicted love of the law and his concerns as a black man in America contribute­d to his questionab­le involvemen­t in the open murder investigat­ion against his friend. With the district attorney sniffing around, Mathews is both in the crosshairs of a hate group and literally under the gun from prosecutor­s.

Six years into a marathon investigat­ion, Mathews and other task force members feel pressured, uncertain of their mission if “a Trump Justice Department mistakes the Aryan Brotherhoo­d for some sort of honor guard.”

When Levi King, the 9year-old son of imprisoned Aryan Brotherhoo­d captain Bill “Big Kill” King, disappears from Hopetown, four hours north of Houston, Mathews jumps back into the fieldwork he loves.

The ranger dutifully heads up Highway 59 to Hopetown. It’s a small settlement of black residents, owners of the property since Reconstruc­tion, and Native Indians near Caddo Lake whose peace has been shattered by a war with a group of poor whites including King’s wife.

In a case rife with political and racial turns, Mathews and his task force get a close look inside the Brotherhoo­d’s leadership. He also realizes the boy’s abduction may not be what it seems.

By the time the mystery of Levi’s disappeara­nce is solved, “Heaven, My Home” has brought justice and a measure of mercy to a wide array of characters, not the least of which is the troubled hero whose life and emotions are laid bare.

Along the way, Attica Locke makes us understand Ranger Darren Mathews, even forgive him as he tries to find forgivenes­s for various characters in this riveting novel. That alone makes it one of the most affecting mysteries of the year.

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? ATTICA LOCKE’S novel begins post-2016 election.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ATTICA LOCKE’S novel begins post-2016 election.
 ??  ?? Mulholland Books
Mulholland Books

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