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Tabernacle

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Detective Tom Jackson attempts to track down an insane murderer, a Mormon who believes that God compels him to kill, in a search that leads throughout Salt Lake City to the Mormon Tabernacle itself

Hardcover

First published January 1, 1983

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About the author

Thomas H. Cook

98 books358 followers
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Thomas H. Cook has been praised by critics for his attention to psychology and the lyrical nature of his prose. He is the author of more than 30 critically-acclaimed fiction books, including works of true crime. Cook published his first novel, Blood Innocents, in 1980. Cook published steadily through the 1980s, penning such works as the Frank Clemons trilogy, a series of mysteries starring a jaded cop.

He found breakout success with The Chatham School Affair (1996), which won an Edgar Award for best novel. Besides mysteries, Cook has written two true-crime books including the Edgar-nominated Blood Echoes (1993). He lives and works in New York City.

Awards
Edgar Allan Poe – Best Novel – The Chatham School Affair
Barry Award – Best Novel – Red Leaves
Martin Beck Award of the Swedish Academy of Detection – The Chatham School Affair
Martin Beck Award of the Swedish Academy of Detection – Red Leaves
Herodotus Prize – Fatherhood

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Displaying 1 of 1 review
Profile Image for David Harris.
400 reviews9 followers
September 21, 2018
The premise of this story is good. A religious extremist resorts to violence in order to eradicate social elements which are sullying the clean, orderly streets of Salt Lake City and undermining the influence of the Mormon pioneers who built and settled the city and whose descendants have been running it ever since.

Unfortunately, the author doesn't know either Salt Lake City or Mormonism all that well, and this lack of a sufficient background distracts the reader who is familiar with them from becoming completely immersed in the tale. For example, I don't know of any expensive jewelry shops that ever existed along 1st Street, even back in the 1980s when this book was written, and the author plays fast and loose with such street names as Temple Street and South 2nd, which are tantalisingly close to the names of actual streets but too muddled to form any sort of mental map of. (Are we on North or South Temple, both of which run east and west, or on West Temple, which runs north and south? Is this 2nd South or are we now up in the Avenues on 2nd Street?)

Also, the Twelve Apostles walk the streets as if they were completely unknown to the local population, and no adoring crowds flock around them in hopes of obtaining an autograph or a thoughtful nugget of wisdom or spiritual advice. And one of them corrects our protagonist, Tom, when he refers to a recently excommunicated member, stating that, in the Mormon church, it’s disfellowshipment and not excommunication. (In fact, both are used, one being a less serious punishment than the other.)

Tom Jackson, the protagonist of this tale, is a police officer who has come to Salt Lake City to escape the corruption of New York City, where he witnessed his partner accepting a bribe from a violent criminal who then murdered an important witness and his young daughter. He’s the only realistic character in this book. We learn about why he left New York only gradually over the course of the novel in short, dreamlike vignettes, and this part of the tale works well.

But Tom’s partner and the chief of police and other officers on the force come across as caricatures, faithful Mormon men who plot to protect the reputations of two deceased Church leaders whose deaths have occurred under suspicious circumstances involving women who are not their wives. And the one or two renegade non-Mormons on the force are likewise caricatures of the non-Mormons who hold themselves aloof from members of the major ethnic/religious clique all along the Wasatch Front.

The killer, too, comes across as simplistic in the scenes where we encounter him. We gain a brief insight into his personality from one of his colleagues during one short scene (before we know who he is), but he mostly comes across as a vicious and mindless jerk who treats his wife and children with the same contempt he does everyone else he comes into contact with.

As a detective novel, _Tabernacle_ is a reasonably respectable read. But, if you're interested in something more informed about Utah and the Mormon culture, try Andrew Hunt‘s _City of Saints_ or _A Killing in Zion_, the first two in a series of detective novels set in 1930s Salt Lake City.
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