Mississippi Blood by Greg Iles is a 2017 William Morrow publication.
I’ve been putting off reading this book for a couple of reasons. One is that Greg Iles doesn’t churn out assembly line novels. It’s always a couple of long years between books, so I like to keep one waiting in the wings, so to speak. The other reason is that this is the last book, at far as I know, in the Penn Cage series, and I wanted to postpone saying goodbye to Penn for as long as possible.
With the news that GI has a new book coming out soon, I decided it was finally time to tackle this final Penn Cage tome.
The book picks up pretty much where the last one left off. Dr. Cage, Penn’s father, is in jail awaiting trial on a murder charge. Penn has buried his fiancé, Caitlin, coping with his grief, the impact these developments have on his young daughter, Annie, and trying to be there for his mother.
However, he’s been avoiding his father, unable to face him, blaming him for Caitlin’s death. But, once he breaks the ice again, he intends to do whatever he can to keep his father out of prison. However, Dr. Cage’s attorney seems bent on throwing the case, while one shocking revelation after another sends ripples through the courtroom.
Meanwhile, Snake Knox is still out there and is as much of a threat as he ever was- maybe even more so…
Well, this certainly was a twisty, yet arduous finale to this trilogy/arc in the Penn Cage chronicles. It’s hard to place this one in any one specific category. This is a mystery/ thriller, of course, but this installment also has some courtroom drama, and while many won’t admit this, this trilogy has also come close to becoming a good old- fashioned southern family saga, as well. The story also puts a white -hot spotlight on race relations, especially in Mississippi.
Mississippi blood is different. It's got some river in it. Delta soil, turpentine, asbestos, cotton poison. But there's a strength to it, too. Strength that's been beat but not broke."
Many people will claim to be progressive thinkers, but when it comes to following through on the hard part of their idealism, they often falter. This is a story that examines these truths while also bringing southern fried justice to those who have wreaked havoc for decades. Some heroes have feet of clay, saints fall from grace, while old enemies shake off the ghosts of the past, and others will rise -up and put their bitterness and anger to rest, hopefully for good.
As always, the reader gets their money’s worth from Greg Iles. This one weighs in at a little over seven hundred pages, as do previous installments. However, this one did drag on a bit too long, in my opinion. I do love epic sagas, as everyone knows, but when I find myself growing impatient, heaving a heavy sigh here or there, or fighting the urge to skip ahead, then maybe, for the sake of momentum, some areas could have been shortened, or left out entirely.
That said, this was one heck of a wild ride. Not only were there a few earth shattering and shocking big reveals I never even saw coming, there was a fair amount of action, and of course I loved all that courtroom wrangling. But, for me, at the end of the day, it was the deep introspection and realizations about the people we think we know, the lengths in which some will go in order to protect what they have, what they know, a way of life, and the consequences others will pay for those actions, that makes this book special. Iles hits upon some hard truths in this novel, poking at what really lies in the deepest darkest corners of the heart.
"Our country's messed up, son. Mortally wounded. And I can't for the life of me see how we're going to heal it. Your generation can't do it. Even your're too old. The new ones coming along.... that's where the hope lies. if there is any.
Penn’s musings are spot on in many ways and should compel readers to take a good, long look in the mirror and search one’s own heart and soul. Ask yourself the hard questions and answer them truthfully. Would you, if tested, have the courage of your own convictions?
4 stars