Salkehatchie Secret
C. Hope Clark
Bell Bridge Books, Copyright 2020
229 pages
Book Review by
Marion Aldridge
Salkehatchie Secret officially became the hardest book for me to put down—ever. I’m an avid reader, a book always in my hand. I read classics, mysteries, history, biography, and adventure. It’s not unusual for me to read a half-dozen pages, set my book aside, accomplish a task or two, and pick the book up again. Sometimes I read a genuine page-turner, but nothing gets in the way of my naps, my meals, or my work, sometimes in that order.
I’ve read other books by Hope Clark, and I enjoy the South Carolina low country setting. the interesting characters, and her way with words. She’s skilled at her craft and has a way with words. I knew all that.
But I wasn’t quite prepared for the compelling plot and complications that had me wanting to know, desperately, what was next in Salkehatchie Secret. The old saw for a mystery writer is that a body needs to fall out of the closet in the first two pages. Within the first ten pages, Clark had a romantic engagement scene involving her heroine Carolina Slade and Slade’s beau, Wayne Largo, followed immediately by the murder of Largo’s first-day-on-the-job new partner, Jasmine Bright. In case a body falling out of a closet is not compelling enough, Clark served up Bright’s body in the woods of a Salkehatchie farm, apparently murdered by the multiple stings from hornets whose nest she had disturbed. Or, was it a murder?
So, we have the beginning of many mysteries that Carolina Slade will have to unravel.
When I read whodunits, I like for there to be some educational component to supplement the entertainment. Dorothy Sayers’s novels, and her hero Lord Peter Wimsey, teach me something about England’s upper classes. When I read Tony Hillerman, and follow his heroes, Jim Chee and Joe Leaphorn, I learn something about Navajo culture. When I immerse myself in John D. MacDonald, and his hero Travis McGee, I fantasize about the life of a Florida beach and boat bum—until the shooting starts. Some authors lure readers into their cat or cooking mysteries, but I’ve not been impressed with those.
What is Clark’s niche? She is utterly unique. She has at least two that pull me in. The first is the South Carolina low country, including the barrier islands, especially Edisto Beach. But the low country of South Carolina also includes marshes, rivers, deltas, swamps, farms, hunting, fishing, and fine food, from shrimp and grits, to venison and turkey, palmetto and pine trees, sea turtles and moccasins. Clark knows the lay of the land, the flora and fauna.
Prior to developing her skills as a writer, Clark served in various capacities in world of agriculture. She knows the difference in soybeans and crowder peas. As an investigator for the federal government, she also knows the sleazier side of farming—borrowing federally secured loans to grow corn but growing marijuana instead. I didn’t know there were so many ways for farmers and rural landowners to cheat the government and abuse consumers until I started reading Clark’s novels. As my friends often hear me say, “There are world’s I know nothing about.” And I don’t need to know much more about this world than I discover by reading Clark’s novels. But what she knows is enough to fill several books.
In Salkehatchie Secret, is the bad guy using government money to fund an anti-government militia? Or, is the hidden reality a cross-racial romance? Or, is a federal agent being bribed to alter a farm’s bookkeeping? Or, none of the above? Or, all of the above? And how can you possibly murder someone with hornet stings? Or, a John Deere tractor?
You’ll have to purchase Salkehatchie Secret to get the answers. When you do, don’t plan to get much sleep.