The Tuscaloosa News

Carolyn Haines brings Hollywood to Mississipp­i

- Don Noble

It’s hard to believe, but “Lights, Camera, Bones” is the 27th in the Sarah Booth Delaney mysteries.

Carolyn Haines, surely one of the most productive authors in the country, has used various techniques to keep the series fresh, most notably moving the characters, on vacation or business, or whatever, to other places. Once they were all in Costa Rica.

In this novel she keeps things fresh right there in the Mississipp­i Delta.

Over In Greenville, a movie is being made. It will be a dramatizat­ion of the horrors and devastatio­n of the 1927 Mississipp­i River flood, a flood that overran the levees, and drowned the town and thousands of acres of valuable farmland.

The writer, director and hero/star of this action movie is a handsome, affable young man, the improbably named Marlon Brandon. (Brandon was on his birth certificat­e; he adopted Marlon.)

This fellow is the grandson of Sen. Brandon, Mississipp­i plantation owner and political powerhouse. No one but Marlon sees the entire script. He has secret surprises.

The family was wealthy long before the flood and, oddly, while most people were bankrupted, their finances were not ruined by the devastatio­n.

Brandon’s movie, many readers will remember, is modeled after “Lanterns on the Levee,” by William Alexander Percy, a popular book which has since become very controvers­ial. The wealthy landowners prevented the agricultur­al workers from running away to safety, sometimes at gunpoint, and forced them to work on reinforcin­g the levees, to protect land none of THEM owned.

Percy also declared in “Lanterns” that “Share-cropping is one of the best systems ever devised to give security and a chance for profit to the simple and the unskilled.”

Many disagree.

“Lights, Camera, Bones”

Carolyn

Minotaur Books. New York, 2024

$28 (Hardcover) 337

Sarah Booth and her detective partner, Tinkie, are touring the set, admiring the actors and enjoying the Hollywood ambiance when a young crew member goes missing, possibly drowned. Then his foot is discovered, having been bitten off by a shark.

Yes, a bull shark can live in fresh water but how did this shark, named Betty, get to Greenville? By herself or was she transporte­d?

Sarah Booth, who is, remember, the creation of Carolyn Haines, who runs an enormous animal rescue and shelter in Semmes, wants divers to catch the shark and return it to the Gulf.

The more environmen­tally sensitive characters, shark-huggers, repeat, several times, that the shark is just doing what sharks do.

As with Percy’s characteri­zation of sharecropp­ing, others disagree. Kill that shark right now!

A crew member is shot — no one suspects the shark — and Marlon disappears, perhaps kidnapped, but by whom?

It becomes clear that two mysteries need to be solved.

One: Who is shooting and abducting people, right now?

And Two: How was it that the Brandon family survived the Great Flood with more cash than before, able to buy up land at low, public auction, bankruptcy prices?

Don Noble’s newest book is Alabama Noir, a collection of original stories by Winston Groom, Ace Atkins, Carolyn Haines, Brad Watson, and eleven other Alabama authors.

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