Fiction Book Review: The Killing Hills by Chris Offutt. Grov

Fiction Book Review: The Killing Hills by Chris Offutt. Grove, $26 (240p) ISBN 978-0-8021-5841-3


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Offutt's brooding and bloody country noir (after
Country Dark) takes readers to the hollers of rural Kentucky, where meth and Oxycontin ravage the population, and havoc is wrought by long-festering family feuds. Mick Hardin, a traumatized veteran of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan now working as an Army intelligence agent, teams up with his sheriff sister to solve the murder of Nonnie Johnson after her body is discovered deep in the woods. In the process, they find themselves pitted against coal tycoon Murvil Knox; a meddling agent FBI agent who fingers an obvious patsy in disturbed outsider Tanner Curtis; roughneck brothers Bobby and Billy; and a pair of bumbling henchmen sent by arch-criminal Charley Flowers. Soon Hardin is up to his ears in intrigue and trying to keep a low profile as he interrogates suspects including local miscreant Fuckin' Barney; Knox's hapless nephew Delmer Collins; Nonnie's vengeful son, Frankie; and the earthy Old Man Tucker, who found Nonnie's body. Not only will Hardin have to find his man somewhere among this cast of backwoods desperados, he'll need to do so before he becomes a casualty of grudges old and new. The lean prose elicits more than a hard-boiled style, and while the brisk yet gnarled atmosphere is reminiscent of

Related Keywords

Kentucky , United States , Afghanistan , Iraq , Murvil Knox , Mick Hardin , Nonnie Johnson , Fuckin Barney , Tanner Curtis , Delmer Collins , Jim Thompson , Chris Offutt , , Killing Hills , Country Dark , Soon Hardin , Old Man Tucker , William Faulkner , கெந்‌டகீ , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , இராக் , தோல் பதனிடுதல் கர்டிஸ் , டெல்மர் கோலின்ஸ் , ஜிம் தாம்சன் , கிறிஸ் ஒப்பூட்த் , நாடு இருள் , வில்லியம் ஃபால்க்னர் ,

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