Award winning writer Bryan Gruley’s newest submission “Bitterfrost” tells the story of Northern Michigan and murder, hockey and high jinx in a neatly crafted mystery tale of love and friendship, retribution and revenge, validation and vindication. Matt Lindon has this month’s book review.
Full disclosure – Gruley is an old friend of mine from Notre
Dame who won a Pulitzer Prize with the Wall Street Journal after 9-11 and now
writes mystery novels. His latest publication, “Bitterfrost,” is his best
effort after his warmly received Starvation Lake series. Good writing is
a learning progression, just like ski jumping or marriage, and Gruley seems to
have hit his stride.
“Bitterfrost” is a cold but bittersweet story about a fictitious town in Northern Michigan where a gruesome double murder has occurred
and is blamed on local sweetheart, Jimmy Baker, who was a hockey goon in a
previous life. His local hockey ‘friend’ Devyn Payne is the relentless
lawyer, with her own history and baggage, who comes to his defense and
rescue.
Sure, there is a likable detective and amiable bartender,
but they are just support characters, window dressing to these two all-stars.
There are back stories and sub stories, but the plot stays true and simple
without any cheap tricks or ironic twists. The writing is terse, and
sometimes tense, but flows on an easy cadence, with a powerful ‘zinger’ word or
sentence on every page. The voice is familiar and friendly, as a matter of
fact, with local Michigan and hockey idioms used to keep it light. There is no
gratuitous violence, and no one gets naked, has sex, or falls in love unless it
is absolutely necessary to the story. Characters are attractive and
agreeable, until they are not.
The obligatory court scenes flow quickly, unlike the real
thing, and I make a cameo appearance as the strapping 62-year-old Judge Mathias
Lindon. Who done it? Who cares? All you want is for the good writing
and reading to continue.
“Bitterfrost” is a smart story of penance, for the bad
things we all do. It is also about self-fulfillment and realization, our
limits and confidence – both true and false. We discover that
self-confidence is often a bluff. The first few pages and the entire
second chapter neatly foreshadow the rest of the story, which wraps up only
when we find out it is really a rom-com disguised as a mystery, like
life.
Gruley has come-into-his-own nationally as a novel writer
and is no longer just a regional sensation. He is Bonafide. So run, don’t
walk to your nearest library to reserve your copy of “Bitterfrost.” It is
reading time well spent, that you will not regret. Look for the
sequel “River Deep” next year.
Bryan Gruley’s “Bitterfrost” is available at your local
libraries and bookstores and of course Amazon, if you must.
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