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24 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Master of the Mystery, May 14, 2008
The first element that always draws me into a Thomas H. Cook novel is his magnificent prose. Lush and musical, it's the perfect vehicle for his tales of buried sin and hidden guilt which often take place in the oldest and most haunted parts of our country. Master of the Delta is Cook's latest work, and it's a very strong addition to a truly distinguished body of work. Set in a small town in the Mississippi delta in 1954, it's narrated by Jack Branch, the scion of an upper crust family, who, from a somewhat condescending sense of duty, has, like his father before him, become a teacher in the local public high school. Deeply interested in the question of evil in an academic way, he's soon to encounter it in actuality. Jack learns that one of his more talented students, Eddie Miller, is the son of the notorious "Coed Killer," and encourages him to come to terms with his family's history by writing a paper on his father and his crimes. Eddie pursues his task diligently, and in so doing unearths old secrets that threaten the social order of the town. But along with his great prose, arresting characters and evocative settings, Cook is a masterful plotter, and events in Master of the Delta unfold in intriguing ways, the book concluding with one of his trademark twists, at once completely unexpected and totally logical. With his complex prose and almost overwhelming sense of the tragic, Cook may not appeal to readers who like their mysteries light and inconsequential, but those who aren't afraid of the dark will appreciate his masterful handling of every literary element and savor Master of the Delta as I did.
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16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
(3.5 stars) "The whole room suffused with light, as dark beginnings almost always are.", June 4, 2008
The power of teaching is heady for Jack Branch, a privileged young man who grew up motherless on a plantation with his scholarly father. Missing his long-dead wife, the elder Branch has remained isolated at Great Oaks since "the incident", the result of a profound depression that has plagued the man for years. Returning after his pricey education to teach at Lakeland High School, Jack is following in his father's footsteps, returning to the landscape of his youth to share his vision with his unlucky students, limited by means and education. In fact, the class he is lecturing on evil in literature has little to recommend the future, most from poverty-riddled backgrounds, many from a rough area known as the Bridges, one lonely student, Eddie Miller, more profoundly separated from the rest by virtue of his history as the son of a local murderer, the Coed Killer. Giving the students an assignment to write a paper on an evil person, Branch takes a special interest in the skinny, shy Eddie. Thinking to mentor Eddie in his progress, Branch becomes embroiled in a psychological drama that holds unseen dangers the more involved he becomes with the boy. Cook peoples his dark, gothic story with eccentrics: the elder Branch, surrounded by the former glory of his old life and an impressive library; the beautiful student, Sheila Longstreet, the object of her boyfriend's obsessive affection; the angry boyfriend's sidekick, a menacing shadow; Eddie Miller, the unfortunate son of the local murderer, a boy of few ambitions who appeals to his mentor, Branch, but later develops an independent spirit; and the well-intentioned, if class-conscious Jack Branch, who assigns only noble motives to himself until his baser nature is revealed. Contrasting the many benefits of entitlement with the hardscrabble lives of students with limited futures, Cook's novel is shrouded in the gloom of centuries past, the fanciful assumptions of a lonely teacher who aspires to a largesse of spirit he learns is stunted by false pride and hurt. The exalted halls of learning do little to protect the protagonist from the insidious flaws of human nature, his grand pretensions proved shallow as events unfold. But Branch remains an observer, secure in his ivory tower as the pawns of fate tumble to the ground in a final act of violence. While the concept is compelling, the journey is often tedious. Given the quality of writing, I might have responded a bit more favorably with fewer pages. Luan Gaines/ 2008.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A engrossing suspense novel on the fatefulness of evil, June 15, 2008
Sinister forces are at work in a small Southern town as the fates spin, measure, and cut the threads of life, and well-intentioned schemes end in tragedy, in this mystery by Edgar Award-winning novelist Thomas Cook. In an act of noblesse oblige, Jack Branch, a graduate of Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, and scion of a plantation owner in the Mississippi Delta, returns to his hometown of Lakeland to teach at the local high-school. In an English course exploring evil, Jack sees potential in Eddie Miller, a student who lives in a hardscrabble section of town. He takes Eddie, the son of "the Coed Killer" under his wings and becomes his mentor. As events unfold, however, we see that no good deed goes unpunished. Meanwhile, Jack's wealthy father pens a biography of Abraham Lincoln, "Sorrow's Last Full Measure," and works on a roman a clef, kept under lock and key, containing startling secrets of the Branch family. A romantic idealist, Jack himself becomes entangled in the coils of evil, for silence is not always golden; it can also be yellow, if one should speak up and fails to do so. Clark's novel will appeal especially to the literary-minded, for he alludes often to authors classic and modern. But he doesn't hold back on the suspense, as readers will discover even in the books' closing paragraphs.
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