13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Every Deborah Knott mystery is unique, original and entertaining, August 12, 2007
Judge Deborah Knott of Colleton County, North Carolina is settling in quite nicely to married life with Sheriff's Deputy Dwight Bryant who has loved her for a long time. When Dwight's ex-wife dies, his eight year old son Cal comes to live them and they are in the process of becoming a family. Deborah and Dwight try not to discuss their work at home but sometimes that is not possible when she has information he needs.
Body parts are found all around the county and nobody has a clue whose remains these are because nobody has filed a missing person's report. Flame Smith comes to town looking for her lover Buzz Harris who she intends to marry once his divorce is finalized. She can't find him so she goes to the sheriff; she identifies marks on the corpse that Buzz had. Finger prints prove he is the victim but nobody knows who could have hated him so much as to do such a horrific thing. The answers lies in a case Deborah heard in court but she is not yet aware of its significance. If she does and provide the information to her husband, with what he has they will be able to identify the killer?.
Every Deborah Knott mystery is unique, original and entertaining with red herrings and unexpected twists to keep the reader guessing who the killer is. In HARD ROW, the audience get an inside look at the judge's personal life as Dwight plays a major role in the storyline. Fans can't help but adore him because he loves his wife and is thankful she loves him enough to marry him and be a mother to his son. Margaret Maron writes bloodless regional police procedurals that are always quite good
Harriet Klausner
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Having Used "Winter's Child" as a bridge, June 21, 2008
to a new family life for Judge Deborah Knott Bryant, Margaret Maron returns her to the bench and the familiarity of Colleton County, NC for last year's "Hard Row". As is the case with most of Maron's writings, we get some no nonsense "judgeship" from Deborah, mixed with family happenings and societal pressures in rural NC.
In this tale, we are enlightened by the discovery that it is not only the border states that cope with the reliance on illegal immigrant labor, only to subject the workers to callousness, indifference and bigotry in the "land of opportunity". But this isn't a political tome, just a sensible use of the current state as a backdrop for a horrendous series of crimes that Judge Deborah's new husband Dwight has to investigate.
Mix in a little family dynamic of Deborah and Dwight getting used to having Dwight's son, Cal, live with them and try to recover from his mom's death.. and you have "Hard Row", a welcome 13th edition to Maron's down home series set in North Carolina.
A good read, but you'll enjoy it far more if you've read the other books in the series.
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15 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Wonderful Down Home Mystery!, August 11, 2007
I'd seen Margaret Maron's name on several books but I'd never picked one up. I found out I've been missing a delightful writer. HARD ROW is the thirteenth novel of her long-running Judge Deborah Knott mysteries. Now that I've read this one, I want to go back and read the others, and probably will make time to do so. That's the best compliment I can pay a writer.
That, and try to tell other people about the book.
So let me tell you about this book. In HARD ROW, Deborah has just gotten married to Sheriff's Deputy Dwight Bryant. They've moved in together, with Dwight's eight-year-old son, and are dealing with the fallout of trying to mesh their lives together, figure out the pecking order of Deborah as stepmother, and handling Cal's (the son) natural abandonment issues with his biological mother. She just picked up one day and sailed out of the picture to take care of herself.
The book opens with a prologue set in January at a bar. Hispanic migrant workers gather there to drink and socialize after work. One of them gets into a fight with a white customer who's obviously spoiling for a physical encounter. This is just a little teaser that sets up the coming action. One of the things I've learned in this book is that Maron enjoys telescoping her plots and letting the reader catch glimpses of it along the way.
By the first chapter, we're in court with Deborah as she deals with the fallout from the bar fight. The scenes told from Deborah's perspective throughout the book are always told in first-person. I enjoyed hearing her voice on the page and peeking in at her thoughts. Maron is a generous writer and leaves a lot of herself on the page. But she mixes up the first-person perspective with third-person when Dwight and the sheriff's office work their murder investigation.
Deborah Knott is a down-to-earth woman who grew up in the back hills of North Carolina. Her roots show in her speech and in the way she thinks about things. Within just a few moments, I felt like I had gotten to know a new friend. The pages whizzed by with astonishing speed.
The court stuff was interesting. Court cases and a chance to be voyeuristic on someone else's troubles appeal to a lot of readers. I enjoyed seeing the small town trouble and how Deborah dealt with it. I grew up in a small town myself, so a lot of the people she was writing about seemed very familiar to me.
Chapter Two gives us a closer look at Deborah's home life and gives us an idea of her relationship and history with Dwight and her new stepson, Cal. A minor family emergency occurs when Dwight gets called in to work a murder and Deborah is plunged directly into her new role as stepmom to save Cal's evening. The boy is a big hockey fan, and he and his dad had had plans to go to a game. Deborah picks up the slack and discovers she has a love for hockey, finding yet a new way that her sudden family is going to be able to work out.
As enjoyable as that all is, and given that the mystery smoothly moves into first gear, I was totally blown away by the events in Chapter Five. As it is in a lot of small towns, Deborah's family owns land that they also farm. Over the years the land has been divided up between several families, which forces them to agree on how to work the land together in order to leverage the most profit. Discussion on which crops to grow, and the potential problems that may grow out of the growing, were intriguing. I grew up around a lot of that myself, but I've lived in the larger cities so long that I haven't thought much of it. I enjoyed getting back to my roots by listening to Deborah and her family discuss these problems that loom so large in the lives of small towns.
The biggest part of Maron's magic is that small community feeling that's on every page of her novel. Readers will feel as though they know these people in this town within just a few short chapters. Not only that, but they'll learn the legal system and the personnel involved with it as well. The vernacular and setting reminded me a lot of author Bill Crider's Sheriff Dan Rhodes mysteries set in Texas.
In the beginning it seems as though Deborah and Dwight are working two separate cases. Deborah is trying to locate a husband in a divorce court proceeding while Dwight and the sheriff's office are picking up pieces of a murdered man spread around the county. Of course, readers will probably guess that the two cases are connected (even though the body parts no longer are!) and that the two investigations ultimately lead them to the same place.
But it's the journey Deborah, Dwight, and the reader take to get there, and the things that happen at home and between family members, that make this a real page-turner. You just can't get enough of the family problems and issues that are ladled throughout the murder mystery. Maron provides a delicious concoction of puzzle and gossip that is guaranteed to keep readers up past bedtime.
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