Most Helpful Customer Reviews
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
BLOODY GOOD READ, June 18, 2001
This is one of Cook's finest works to date. As we get involved with Jackson Kinley and his search for the truth behind a 30 year old crime, we find ourselves intrigued and mystified. As Kinley researches old court transcripts, interviews people, and starts putting the pieces together, we enter a labyrinthine maze of vast proportions. Cook, whose specialty has been journeying back to previous crimes, outdoes himself in manipulating the reader into finding many suspects and many possible solutions to the question: did an innocent man die in the electric chair for a crime he didn't commit? Was a murder even committed? Who is behind the suspected cover-up? Although the ending does have an air of ambiguity, when revisiting the novel mentally, one can see how everything ties together in the end. A superb work by Mr. Cook.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Solves the real puzzle: the mystery of self, June 23, 1998
By A Customer
"It's better to know--isn't it?" This is the question haunting Jackson Kinley, a writer of true crime accounts who returns home to an old friend's funeral and finds himself the inheritor of his friend's search for the truth about a crime almost thirty years old. What really happened to the young girl whose bloodstained dress was found draped over a tree on the mountainside? The man executed for her murder is believed to be innocent by his daughter. As Kinley begins his investigation into the past, he discovers that the details of the fatal day don't make sense. The secret life of the powerful in a small town comes out into the harsh light of judgement. Most important, Kinley begins to discover aspects of himself he had buried, or never explored--a capacity for love, a night of terror and breathlessness long ago, and ultimately, the reason why he has spent his years talking to those strange, frightening people in whom there is "something missing" -- a something that would have prevented them from murdering and torturing other human beings. Cook is a fine writer, and this is an excellent story of psychological suspense. One wonders, as Kinley traces this ancient wrong, and makes his way to the interior of his own motivations, whether Cook himself is working his way into--or out of--a personal heart of darkness that compels him, like his main character, to explore the tragic secrets of the past. If so, he makes the interior expedition a worthwhile journey for his readers, as well as for himself.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Labyrinth of Evidence, March 16, 2001
Cooke is in fine form in first-person narrated "Evidence of Blood." The writing is leaner, and anti-hero Jackson Kinley is more likable than the usual Cooke protagonist. Kinley is closed off from all but logical deduction, yet not a Sherlock Holmesian mock-up. He clearly has done all one man can possibly do to remove himself physically, emotionally and mentally from his birthplace Sequoyah, GA. He has one of the most unusual occupations I have happened across in the mystery genre. He successfully writes in-depth true crime books about the horribly depraved killers. Why he does this would make an interesting side topic. When Kinley returns to his hometown for the funeral of his best friend only a month after he has buried his grandmother, he is hoping his stay will be a short one. However he is drawn into the investigation of a 30 year-old trial that his friend has been researching before his untimely death. Just to stay off the beaten path, Cooke assures us (via the narrator) that the friend did not come to an untimely end; he died a perfectly normal death. The mystery of a man executed for killing a teenaged girl is meticulously unraveled. Kinley studies trial transcripts, interviews witnesses, visits sites all presented in an appealing manner. As usual, Cooke gives people instant recall of events that happened 30 years ago, which I found implausible. But this is a small quibble. The book builds in intensity until the entire community is in some way involved. Always in the background is the gray malevolence of the person or persons who schemed to execute an innocent man. Cooke forces us to think logically along with his narrator, and we join him in his repeated thought: "Do you really want to know?" The finale left me with a few unanswered questions; but this is typical of the author and makes his books star material for discussion groups. Everyone will have a slightly different take on the ending. I recommend this engrossing book.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
|