Plot
The layered plot of the latest in the excellent Jenny Cain series finds the Port Frederick, Mass., sleuth probing the cause of her recently deceased mother’s insanity. Cain discovers that her mother’s mental collapse many years before coincided with the bankruptcy of the family business. The closing of Cain Clams created considerable unemployment locally and countless enemies for the Cains–one such foe may now be trying to prevent the amateur detective from delving further into her family’s past and the town’s secrets. As she tracks down public mysteries, Cain unearths painful personal issues; an attempt on her life, construed as an effort at suicide, forces her to deal with the legacy of her mother’s madness. Pickard masterfully resolves both plot lines in this affecting, provocative novel centering around the mystery at the heart of mother-daughter relationships.
My Analysis
First, a short story of my own. I had read Pickard’s novels for many years before I attended a conference in Chicago where she was one of the guest authors. I had enjoyed the books I’d read, so bought about nine more and asked her for autographs. She obliged. I think it was one of my first meeting, if not the first, of a well-known, published author.
As for I.O.U., this looked different than her other Cain mysteries and it was. This was deeper, darker, more serious. The others are serious, too, but not as much.
I found the writing very well done. Long sentences to express Jenny’s mood and show the atmosphere of scenes. Internal monologues and dialogues.
At first, I wondered why Jenny waited until her mother’s funeral to decide she needed to find answers. Her mother had been in the hospital for a long time. Why wasn’t Jenny determined to find answer before the mother died?
Right away, you find people harbor secrets, which is normal for mysteries. This, however, draws in the reader to be as determined as Jenny to find the answers. Every person she interviews has secrets and characteristics that reveal their true selves. From the sister to the father, to the Father, to the nurse, to the businessmen, to the newspaper publisher. Pickard has written this story so the reader, at least this reader, ends up disliking everyone and rooting for Jenny and Geoff, the last two survivors in this town of a lot of people who wished they would go away.
It’s an awful story in the sense of portraying this woman’s life. Yes, Jenny rises above it all in the end, but I think from this point on, she’ll have an upward battle to “come back” to a sense of normalcy.
It’s a wonderfully written story with strength and danger (yes, there’s still a mystery here to be solved and an attempted murder suspect to be found), and I found myself immersed in the depth of it all. I didn’t know where it was headed. Pickard did a great job of showing a lot of truth in various areas of life. From religion to medical practice to business practices.
I thought about the normal blue belt rank for this, but I think I’ll bump it up one rank to:
Brown Belt