Title: Redemption Road
Author: John Hart
Publisher: St Martin's Press
Read: March 2016
Expected publication: 3 May 2016
Synopsis (Goodreads):
Over 2 million copies of his books in print. The first and
only author to win back-to-back Edgars for Best Novel. Every book a New York
Times bestseller.
Now after five years, John Hart is back with a stunning literary thriller.
Imagine:
A boy with a gun waits for the man who killed his mother.
A troubled detective confronts her past in the aftermath of a brutal shooting.
After thirteen years in prison, a good cop walks free. But for how long?
And deep in the forest, on the altar of an abandoned church, the unthinkable has just happened…
This is a town on the brink. This is a road with no mercy.
Since his debut bestseller, The King of Lies, reviewers across the country have heaped praise on John Hart, comparing his writing to that of Pat Conroy, Cormac McCarthy and Scott Turow. With each novel Hart has climbed higher on the New York Times Bestseller list, with his last two books - The Last Child and Iron House - landing squarely in the top ten. His masterful writing and assured evocation of place have won readers around the world and earned history's only consecutive Edgar Awards for Best Novel.
After five years, John Hart returns with Redemption Road, his most powerful story yet.
Now after five years, John Hart is back with a stunning literary thriller.
Imagine:
A boy with a gun waits for the man who killed his mother.
A troubled detective confronts her past in the aftermath of a brutal shooting.
After thirteen years in prison, a good cop walks free. But for how long?
And deep in the forest, on the altar of an abandoned church, the unthinkable has just happened…
This is a town on the brink. This is a road with no mercy.
Since his debut bestseller, The King of Lies, reviewers across the country have heaped praise on John Hart, comparing his writing to that of Pat Conroy, Cormac McCarthy and Scott Turow. With each novel Hart has climbed higher on the New York Times Bestseller list, with his last two books - The Last Child and Iron House - landing squarely in the top ten. His masterful writing and assured evocation of place have won readers around the world and earned history's only consecutive Edgar Awards for Best Novel.
After five years, John Hart returns with Redemption Road, his most powerful story yet.
My thoughts:
Elizabeth Black is a tough cop with the permanent scars of
abuse she suffered as a teenager still buried inside her. Her own traumatic
past has made her an advocate for abused and suffering children, which has
gotten her into trouble more than once. This time it almost costs her her own
life when she sets out to free a teenage girl, Channing, from the hands of her
abductors. Two bad men die a violent death in the process, and unless Elizabeth
is able to justify the killings, she may face losing the job she loves and a
murder charge. Her partner knows that there is more to the story than she lets
out, so why is she so reluctant to defend herself?
In the meantime one of her other charges, 14-year-old Gideon
Strange, steals his father’s gun and sets out to kill the man who has been
charged with the savage murder of his mother Julia. He is due to be released
today after serving 13 years in prison, a sentence which can never make up for
destroying Gideon’s family and turning his father into a hopeless drunk. The prisoner’s
name is Adrian Wall, an ex-cop who saved Elizabeth’s life once a long time ago.
Maybe this is why she feels a strange kind of allegiance to him even after all
that has happened since. Or perhaps it is because she has never really believed
that he is guilty of Julia’s murder. Then another woman is killed in the same
manner Julia was all those years ago, and everyone is convinced that Adrian is
the perpetrator once again. With Elizabeth’s world collapsing around her, she
must set out to fight for justice – for herself, for the children she has come
to care for so deeply, and for the truth to come out. If Adrian is indeed
innocent, the real killer is still out there, and nobody is looking for him. But
in this fight there are a lot of players who will do everything to hide the
truth and she cannot trust anyone, even those nearest and dearest to her.
I read a lot of mystery and suspense and it is rare that a
thriller captures me totally and utterly from page one and has me spellbound
until the very last page. I loved John Hart’s “The Last Child” (it is one of my
all time favourites), and this book was no exception. Somehow Hart’s voice – graphic,
tough and brutally honest – works well for me. Saying that, this book is not
for the faint hearted. It contains some very dark scenes of depravity, torture,
abuse and betrayal, and a lot of collateral damage. Most of the main protagonists
are damaged in some deep fundamental way, which makes me wonder how the human
mind could move on from this and whether people would ever be able to lead a
normal life afterwards. Whilst some of the more unsavoury characters are
victims of circumstance, others are so depraved that they will haunt your worst
nightmares. Caught up in amongst all this are the innocent victims. Will
justice be served? Is killing justified, if bad men are killed and other lives
saved? This novel will throw up all
these questions and more, challenging the reader to find their own moral
compass – which is not always black and white, right or wrong.
But the underlying message for me – as the title states so
aptly – was about redemption, about doing the right thing and finding out the
truth, no matter what the cost. In the words of seasoned lawyer “Crybaby”
Jones:
“Then let me tell you a thing I’ve learned in my eighty-nine
years. This house, the friends and the memories – I’d trade it for a chance to
do what that young woman just did: a noble act, freely undertaken. How many of
us have such a chance? And how many the courage to take it?”
Some people in the novel will have the courage, others will
betray those nearest and dearest to them for personal gain. Nobody can be
trusted – and Elizabeth must find out the hard way.
Redemption Road is a complex, well-constructed and suspenseful
thriller with several plot lines converging into one breath-taking and brutal finale.
Whilst some of my suspicions were justified and came true, there were still plenty
of surprises in store. As intended, the end had me reeling in horror and
revulsion as the depth of betrayal was revealed – but no spoilers here! I loved
Redemption Road and cannot wait to read more from this author. Very highly
recommended.
Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for providing me with a free electronic copy of this novel in exchange for an honest review.
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