"Effective and Brilliant!"
William Heffernan, a former reporter for the New York Daily
News, won the 1996 Edgar Allan Poe Award for his novel,
TARNISHED BLUE. He is the author of sixteen novels,
including the international best-sellers, THE CORSICAN,
RITUAL, BLOOD ROSE, and CORSICAN HONOR. His novel THE
DINOSAUR CLUB was a New York Times bestseller and is in
development at Warner Brothers to become a motion picture. It's the 1930's. The weight of the Great Depression seems
relentless and unforgiving. In Germany, Hitler is a rising
political figure. And in the backwoods of Vermont is a
small town known as Jerusalem's Landing. Peace is kept in
the small town by constable Samuel Bradley, whose father
was the constable before him. Some of the locals pride
themselves on the fact that their town was part of the
Underground Railroad. But when the body of Royal Firman, a
white man, is found on property owned by Jeheil Flood, a
black man, the fact that racism is alive, strong and well
becomes more than apparent. That racism is flaunted. The white people in town are convinced that the black
people living up on Beulah Hill have gone too far. They
see no need for a police investigation. They all know
Flood is guilty. When Bradley is not as convinced as the
rest of his community, the reason behind his apprehension
is clear. He is, what they call, "bleached". His great
grandmother was a black woman, once owned by people in
town. A man full of conflict, Bradley has never come to
terms with who he is. He so badly wants to be white that
he can't see anything without tying color to it. Becoming more and more enraged, Firman's father begins to
rally the racists, set on eliciting justice one way or
another. Frenchy LeMay is brought in from Burlington to lead the
murder investigation. Coupled with Bradley, the two have
their work cut out for them. The town is on the verge of a
revolution, and no one seems to know what is keeping the
small town war from beginning. And on their search for the
truth it looks like controversy revolves around Elizabeth,
a black woman. And again, the community does not feel
Bradley can be objective, since while growing up he and
Elizabeth had been best friends, and lovers. Once the shooting begins, there is no stopping it until
every last truth is unearthed. Filled with tension and action, BEULAH HILL is an important
novel, unsurpassable by any in its genre. Like William
Heffernan's CITYSIDE, BEULAH HILL is an amazing novel
filled with concrete characters, an absorbing plot and a
compelling mystery that keeps readers engaged and turning
pages. Where some other best-selling authors in the same
genre use machine gun-like sentences and tend to avoid
narrative at all costs, Heffernan's poetic literary prose
suck readers deeper into the story. His storytelling is
effective and brilliant.
Reviewed by Phillip Tomasso
Posted September 27, 2003
SummaryA novel of rare literary distinction—an erotic thriller
combined with a true mystery, and a look back at a little
known part of the American societal patchwork—Beulah Hill,
by bestselling author William Heffernan, is a brilliant and
deeply original work of fiction. Set in the 1930's, the
story follows the investigation of a racially motivated
murder in a rural Vermont town and the shocking
ramifications it has on that backwoods community, which had
once served as a stopping place for runaway slaves. Having
made new lives for themselves there, many of these former
slaves married interracially, and their progeny became what
was known as "bleached". The result was an atmosphere of
tension and distrust that—as so vividly rendered in this
novel—occasionally exploded in acts of violence . . . and
even murder. At a time when the Great Depression had
created widespread fear and Hitler was just beginning his
reign in Germany, Beulah Hill tells the story of a white
man who was murdered in an almost ritualistic manner on
land owned by the only remaining black family in that small
town. Heading the investigation is a young constable who
is himself a deeply conflicted member of the "bleached"
underclass and who is intimately involved with the proud
and headstrong black woman at the center of the killing.
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