The action is intense, gritty, and recurrent in HARD CASH
VALLEY, the third crime novel from Brian Panowich (Minotaur, 2020). It’s the story of Dane Kirby, a fire chief turned consultant to the Georgia
Bureau of Investigation. Kirby is sent to Florida to help the Feds investigate
the fallout from a brutal murder associated with the victim’s alleged swindling
of prize money from the Slasher—the biggest (underground) cockfight in the USA.
The Slasher took place at the Farm in Dane’s home turf of McFalls County, which
is familiar territory for readers of Panowich’s previous two novels, BULL
MOUNTAIN and LIKE LIONS.
Early in the investigation, Kirby is teamed with a
hard-nosed FBI agent named Roselita Velasquez and the duo learns that the
victim’s younger brother is hiding out somewhere in Georgia. Finding and
protecting the boy, who has Asperger syndrome, becomes a driving force that
leads Kirby and Velasquez down some harrowing paths in the north Georgia
mountains.
The search for the boy follows a trail that becomes
increasingly scattered with the bodies of anyone involved in the international
cockfighting ring, and Dane Kirby—with his intimate knowledge of the landscape
and the players of McFalls County, and a motivation to find and protect the boy—is
essential to guiding the investigation while tussling with federal and local
law enforcement along the way.
Dane Kirby’s motivation runs much deeper than achieving
the satisfaction of a rescue operation. An event in his past—not revealed until
near the novel’s end—haunts his existence and drives his energy, and it constitutes
a powerful secondary storyline. The profound psychological heaves of love and
loss inform nearly every decision Dane makes; those yearnings make him at once
more courageous and more fragile. He’s a man trying to live in the physical reality
of his world, but the spiritual realms seem, at times, to inhibit his ability
to make meaning out of anything.
Panowich’s prose is graceful and addictive. His characters, no matter how minor to the plot are memorable from their first entrance on the page. Take James Edwin, the key holder for Black Mountain Safari Zoo. "The obese man in sweatpants and house shoes fumbled around in the large pocket of his canvas jacket the way a woman would rifle through the insides of a purse until he pulled out a set of keys... ." This is a character you can instantly see in your mind’s eye.
Panowich’s prose is graceful and addictive. His characters, no matter how minor to the plot are memorable from their first entrance on the page. Take James Edwin, the key holder for Black Mountain Safari Zoo. "The obese man in sweatpants and house shoes fumbled around in the large pocket of his canvas jacket the way a woman would rifle through the insides of a purse until he pulled out a set of keys... ." This is a character you can instantly see in your mind’s eye.
The emotional undercurrents of HARD CASH VALLEY are often
wrenching but never melodramatic. This is a deeply affecting and entertaining
crime story that rewards the reader with both a memorable payoff to the mystery
elements of the plot and a moving conclusion to Dane Kirby’s journey of the
soul.