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Hard Row (Deborah Knott Series #13) by Margaret Maron β€” book cover

Hard Row (Deborah Knott Series #13)

by Margaret Maron
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Overview

As Judge Deborah Knott presides over a case involving a barroom brawl, it becomes clear that deep resentments over race, class, and illegal immigration are simmering just below the surface in the countryside. An early spring sun has begun to shine like a blessing on the fertile fields of North Carolina, but along with the seeds sprouting in the thawing soil, violence is growing as well. Mutilated body parts have appeared along the back roads of Colleton County, and the search for the victim's identity and for that of his killer will lead Deborah and her new husband, Sheriff's Deputy Dwight Bryant, into the desperate realm of undocumented farm workers exploited for cheap labor.

In the meantime, Deborah and Dwight continue to adjust to married life and to having Dwight's eight-year-old son, Cal, live with them full time. When another body is found, these newlyweds will discover dark truths that threaten to permanently alter the serenity of their rural surroundings and their new life together.

Synopsis

As Judge Deborah Knott presides over a case involving a barroom brawl, it becomes clear that deep resentments over race, class, and illegal immigration are simmering just below the surface in the countryside. An early spring sun has begun to shine like a blessing on the fertile fields of North Carolina, but along with the seeds sprouting in the thawing soil, violence is growing as well. Mutilated body parts have appeared along the back roads of ColletonCounty, and the search for the victim's identity and for that of his killer will lead Deborah and her new husband, Sheriff's Deputy Dwight Bryant, into the desperate realm of undocumented farm workers exploited for cheap labor.

In the meantime, Deborah and Dwight continue to adjust to married life and to having Dwight's eight-year-old son, Cal, live with them full time. When another body is found, these newlyweds will discover dark truths that threaten to permanently alter the serenity of their rural surroundings and their new life together.

Publishers Weekly

Fans of Edgar-winner Maron's reliably pleasing Deborah Knott series will be glad to see the North Carolina judge back on the bench in this intriguing 13th mystery (after 2006's Winter's Child). Deborah has to decide a high-stakes divorce case with a no-show husband as well as preside over a growing caseload involving migrant workers pitted against locals. Meanwhile, body parts begin to appear in rural Colleton County that turn out to belong to Buck Harris, a farmer known for his exploitation of cheap immigrant labor who happens to be Deborah's missing divorce plaintiff. When Knott's new husband, sheriff's deputy Dwight Bryant, investigates the immigrants living on the Harris farm, he uncovers a sequence of events that suggest something much more damaging than the sheer indifference the victim had shown to his workers. As Deborah adjusts to becoming the stepmother of Dwight's motherless eight-year-old son, Cal, her large extended family debates the future of their own family farm. Readers will eagerly await further developments in the next book. (Aug.)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

About the Author, Margaret Maron

Margaret Maron grew up on a farm near Raleigh and lived in Brooklyn for many years. Returning to her North Carolina roots prompted Marcia to write a series based on her own background, the first of which, BOOTLEGGER'S DAUGHTER, was a Washington Post bestseller and swept the major mystery awards for 1993. DEATH'S HALF ACRE is the fourteenth book in the acclaimed Deborah Knott series. Visit her website at margaretmaron.com.

Reviews

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

Fans of Edgar-winner Maron's reliably pleasing Deborah Knott series will be glad to see the North Carolina judge back on the bench in this intriguing 13th mystery (after 2006's Winter's Child). Deborah has to decide a high-stakes divorce case with a no-show husband as well as preside over a growing caseload involving migrant workers pitted against locals. Meanwhile, body parts begin to appear in rural Colleton County that turn out to belong to Buck Harris, a farmer known for his exploitation of cheap immigrant labor who happens to be Deborah's missing divorce plaintiff. When Knott's new husband, sheriff's deputy Dwight Bryant, investigates the immigrants living on the Harris farm, he uncovers a sequence of events that suggest something much more damaging than the sheer indifference the victim had shown to his workers. As Deborah adjusts to becoming the stepmother of Dwight's motherless eight-year-old son, Cal, her large extended family debates the future of their own family farm. Readers will eagerly await further developments in the next book. (Aug.)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

Library Journal

In her latest outstanding Deborah Knott mystery, Maron tackles big issues-truck farming, undocumented migrant workers, and the prejudice faced by Latinos willing to work hard for a better life-with insight and pathos. When a hand is found in a field in Colleton County, NC, the Sheriff's Department search for the rest of the corpse. As her husband investigates, Judge Knott hears cases involving assault, domestic violence, and property damage while trying to handle her new responsibilities as a stepmom. Maron has never written a bad book, and with the 13th in the series (after Winter's Child), she gives a clear picture of contemporary life in the rural South, tying it up in a neat mystery that keeps the reader guessing to the end. Highly recommended. Maron lives near Raleigh, NC.


β€”Jo Ann Vicarel

Kirkus Reviews

Are migrants the South's latest attempt to indenture servants?Colleton County, N.C., which used to thrive on tobacco, now focuses on trendier salad veggies. Harris Farms' tomatoes have made multimillionaires out of the divorcing Harrises. When soon-to-be ex-Mrs. Harris appears in Judge Deborah Knott's court to wrangle out a financial settlement, though, her nemesis Buck fails to appear. Small wonder. His body pops up in several places: Here a right arm, there a leg or two, his head and penis nailed to a farm post. Then another butchered right arm pops up. Are the two deaths related? Deborah's new husband, Deputy Sheriff Dwight Bryant, makes little headway until he understands the big fight the Harrises had nine months before and sees why the migrants have clammed up about it. Seething beneath the brouhaha is one party's notion that migrants are not quite human, not to be coddled by safety procedures, not to be treated as equals. The same sort of racial enmity animates Officer Mayleen Richards' family when she takes up with Miguel Diaz. By reviewing one of her court cases, Deborah is able to help Dwight break open his mystery, though not in time to stop another murder. Marriage and stepmothering Dwight's son Cal have made a hockey fan out of Deborah (Winter Child, 2006, etc.). But it's Maron's arguments against pesticides and racial exploitation, and old bootlegger Kezzie's last line, that stick with you longest.

Book Details

Published
August 1, 2008
Publisher
Grand Central Publishing
Pages
352
Format
Mass Market Paperback
ISBN
9780446618076

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