February 1, 2022: Volume XC, No. 3

Page 9

“Larger than life and darker than hell.” heartbroke

HEARTBROKE

a long-missing girl named Susan has been found in Bornholm, where children from Louise’s hometown of Osted travel yearly on school trips. In 1995, one of those children—Susan—never returned. As the body count piles up and more women go missing, Louise can’t help but wonder if it has something to do with Trine’s disappearance, as she was one of the girls to last see Susan alive in Bornholm. Straight on the heels of a breakup and feeling a bit lost and lethargic, Louise breaks out of her sleeping pill–induced stupor to help lead an unofficial investigation into finding her sister-in-law and figuring out what exactly happened on Trine’s fateful school trip back in 1995. It’s a fast, compelling book, but the ending feels a bit far-fetched, and one can’t help wondering what’s in the water in Denmark considering that every character’s life seems to be in total chaos at the same time. Suicide attempts, teenage pregnancies, and breakups abound during the short time it takes to discover who’s at fault for both current and past disappearances. You may have to take it with a grain of salt, but it’s still a fun journey.

Bieker, Chelsea Catapult (288 pp.) $26.00 | April 5, 2022 978-1-64622-127-1

y o u n g a d u lt

The down-at-the-heels and lovelorn of the American West battle addictions, exploitation, and abandonment. If Bieker’s debut novel, Godshot (2020), were an acclaimed television series, Heartbroke would be its spinoff. These 11 stories feature Bieker’s characteristic protagonists: naïve, mainly female, flattened by poverty, and desperate to cling to whatever helps make sense of the world or, rather, the corner of it Bieker retraces: namely, central California, where the bulk of these stories are set. (And in true spinoff fashion, characters from Godshot even pop up occasionally here.) Bieker hasn’t let up on the drama any in these narratives, either; there is a Coen brothers–esque dark zaniness to their plots, which are full of hapless criminals and bumbling lovers, all filtered through lovely prose. (“I had me a cowboy once on a hot steam Friday night, on a hot go all the way time, just us together in his truck” reads the beginning of the heist tale “Cowboys and Angels.”) In the opening story, “Mamas, Don’t Let Your Babies Grow Up To Be Miners,” a college-age barmaid takes up with an abusive miner called Spider Dick and tries to figure out what her dead mother would have wanted her to do with her life. In the affecting “Lyra,” a brothel madam hosts a young academic writing a dissertation about sex work and a long-ago crime that the madam knows far more about than she’s saying. In nearly all the stories, the mother-child relationship is the beating heart, a heart that is shot through with the poison of poverty, substance abuse, and disenfranchisement. But that Bieker finds such humor and poetry in that heart is a testament to both her skill and her tender affection for her wayward characters. Larger than life and darker than hell.

A HARMLESS LIE

Blaedel, Sara Trans. by Mark Kline Dutton (304 pp.) $17.00 paper | March 22, 2022 978-0-593-33094-4 Off-duty detective Louise Rick investigates a missing person case with a personal connection. Louise is in Thailand, on leave from her job as a detective in Copenhagen’s Missing Persons department, when her father calls to inform her that her brother, Mikkel, has attempted suicide. Mikkel’s wife, Trine, disappeared for the second time a few days earlier, and Mikkel has hit rock bottom. Louise is on the next plane back to Denmark, where she quickly discovers that there’s more going on than a woman leaving her husband. The body of |

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