Gold of our fathers

Kwei Quartey

Book - 2016

"Darko Dawson has just been promoted to Chief Inspector in the Ghana Police Service--the promotion even comes with a (rather modest) salary bump. But he doesn't have long to celebrate, because his new boss is transferring him from Accra, Ghana's capital, out to remote Obuasi, in the Ashanti region, an area now notorious for the illegal exploitation of its gold mines. The assignment will last at least a year, meaning Dawson has the unpleasant choice of uprooting his entire family or making do without them. Worst of all, when Dawson arrives at the Obusai headquarters, he finds it in complete disarray. The office is a mess of uncatalogued evidence and cold case files, morale is low, and discipline among officers is lax. Dawson ...is beginning to see how much work is cut out for him when he sets out to investigate his first homicide case, on only his second day on the job. A body has been unearthed in one of the gold quarries--the man who owned the mine, a Chinese immigrant named Bao Liu, one of many who have flocked to the Ashanti region to work the alluvial gold mines. The list of potential suspects is a long one, and Dawson must pursue it alone, because he can't trust his sergeant partner. He learns very quickly how dangerous it is to pursue justice in this kingdom of illegal gold mines, where the worst offenders have so much money they have no fear of the law"--

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Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
Published
New York, NY : Soho Crime [2016]
Language
English
Main Author
Kwei Quartey (-)
Physical Description
xi, 348 pages : illustration ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781616956301
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

This is the fourth in Quartey's Inspector Darko Dawson series, set in contemporary Ghana. Dawson, based in the capital city of Accra with a greatly loved wife and family, wants nothing more than to stay in Accra. But a promotion to chief inspector in the Ghana Police Service comes with a sting a reassignment to Obuasi in the Ashanti region, where gold mines scar the land, and illegal mining by foreigners exploits the Ghanaian people. The Chinese manager of one of the gold mines is discovered dead and buried in gold ore. Dawson has to rely heavily on interviewing rather than forensics here, since the victim's family moved the body from the crime scene and washed it before any analysis could be done. But Dawson is a formidable interviewer and psychologist. He uncovers another murder, an especially chilling one, performed by the victim shortly before his golden burial. Quartey presents a good-hearted policeman in a noir world of exploitation and corruption. Fans of this series will also want to check out Malla Nunn's South African mysteries.--Fletcher, Connie Copyright 2016 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Quartey's exceptional fourth Darko Dawson mystery (after 2014's Murder at Cape Three Points) takes the Accra, Ghana, policeman, recently promoted to chief inspector, to the remote town of Obuasi. There he must work with the inept and undisciplined local police, whose deficiencies handicap him in investigating the murder of Bao Liu, a Chinese mine owner. Bao is but one of the many Chinese who have moved to Ghana to exploit, illegally, the country's rich gold reserves, a practice the government is incapable of stopping, or else unwilling to. Dawson has a number of suspects to question, including Bao's disgruntled workers, and a local who blames Bao for his son's death. He gets an ally in a journalist, Akua Helmsley, who suspects government collusion in the environmental damage wrought by the illegal miners. The revelation of the key clue is especially clever, and fans of mysteries that offer a window into another culture will be more than satisfied. Agent: Marly Rusoff, Marly Rusoff Literary Agency. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Darko Dawson has been promoted to chief inspector, but no sooner than his promotion is final, he is transferred from comfortable Accra, Ghana, out to remote Obuasi in the Ashanti region. The day after Dawson arrives, the body of a Chinese gold miner is found in his own quarry. Illegal gold mining is a dangerous occupation, but too much money makes it hard to say no. The fourth series entry (after Murder at Cape Three Points) is a solid addition to promote diversity in mystery collections. © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Darko Dawson (Murder at Cape Three Points, 2014, etc.) is seconded to Obuasi, far from his home base in Accra, just in time to catch a particularly brutal murder. Dawson should know better than to celebrate his recent promotion to Chief Inspector, which turns out to be just one more reason he'd be the perfect person to send to Ghana's Ashanti region when the ailing local CID chief dies. Scarcely has he formed his first impressions of his inefficient and insubordinate constables and Ata Longdon, his bullying commander, than word comes that mineworker Kudzo Gablah and his crew have discovered the body of Bao Liu, their exacting boss, buried in one of the mines they're working. Bao's brother, Wei Liu, who moves and washes the corpse, ostensibly to avoid shocking new widow Lian Liu, is the obvious suspect, but once he proves an alibi, Dawson must look elsewhere. He finds a powerful motive in Bao's unrequited flirtation with Comfort, the girlfriend of neighboring farmer Amos Okoh, whose brother, Yaw Okoh, swore vengeance after a quarrel between Amos and Bao left the former dead and the latter unpunished. Despite procuring a confession to Bao's murder, Dawson is still dissatisfied. That's just as well, because a Ghanaian task force decides that these private crimes are less important than the corruption introduced to the region by the gold mines illegally owned and operated by Chinese interlopers like the Liu brothers. Dawson finds himself caught between warring factionsnot just the good guys and the bad guys, but the good guys and the not-so-good guys. Despite some serious problems with pacingsuccessive mysteries and solutions seem to pop up and recede at the author's whimQuartey presents tonic news for Americans who assume that Europeans were the most calamitous force ever to strike Ghana. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Dark gravel, the gray-and-black color of an aging man's beard, renders the most gold. One has to dig beyond the water table to reach the coveted ore. As far as Kudzo Gablah's eye could see, machine-excavated pits and craters disfigured the once lush landscape. Mounds of tawny soil surrounded each scoopedout depression, as if a giant hand had reached inside the earth and turned it inside out.      Short-handled shovel in hand, Kudzo stood in the middle of one of the craters, his old ill-fitting Wellington boots sinking into the soft earth. At the top of the pit, which was more than twice Kudzo's height of five-eleven, his four fellow galamsey workers joked and jostled with each other, and even though he had yelled at them that they might as well begin work while waiting for the boss to arrive, they were slow to start. At only twenty-four years old, Kudzo was the most experienced and the most senior mine worker, the others barely out of their teens.     He planted his first stab deep into the gravel, enjoying the crisp sound of earth giving way to the sharp blade. He and the other guys would be digging all day. It would be especially grueling without the aid of the hydraulic excavator, which had broken down two days ago. Their Chinese boss, Bao Liu, had said he would come in early this morning to attempt a repair of the vehicle, but he was nowhere to be seen. It was almost 6:30 now, and that was odd because when Mr. Liu said he was going to arrive early, he meant early. Perhaps he or his wife had fallen ill.     Kudzo looked up to see Wei Liu carefully making his way toward them over a narrow muddy crest at the top of one of the pits. About thirty-five, he was Bao's younger brother, but the two were as unlike as a yam tuber and a thin stalk of sugar cane. Wei was stout, while his older brother was hard and wiry. Bao yelled a lot and insulted people, whereas Wei was quiet and sullen. They knew some English and a little bit of Twi. Between those two languages, they managed to communicate with the Ghanaian workers. Sometimes Kudzo and his friends made fun of the Chinese brothers' accents and mimicked the sound of Chinese as they perceived it. Kudzo didn't like Wei, much less his older brother.     "Where Bao?" Wei asked Kudzo abruptly, without even a "good morning."     "Please, I don't know," Kudzo said, thinking, Shouldn't you know better than me where your brother is? "Maybe he went somewhere." More specifically, Kudzo was thinking Bao might have gone into the bush to relieve himself, the way everyone did around the mines. "Didn't he call you?"     "Yeah," Wei said. "Four twenty this morning."     Looking worried, Wei left to examine the excavator. Something was jammed in the hydraulic arm attached to the bucket--the huge, clawed scooper shaped like a cupped hand. As far as Kudzo knew, Bao and Wei were supposed to have tried to repair it early this morning, and Bao's truck was parked in the usual spot.     Kudzo's companions picked up their shovels and slid down into the pit beside him. Before long, they would be smeared with mud as they worked. The warmth of the morning hinted at the heat that would begin to peak before noon. As fit as the young workers were, they still found the ten working hours physically and mentally punishing. Not everyone could do it. Dropping out after a few weeks was common, especially for city boys. Unable to handle the pace and intensity, they often packed up and left. Sprains and injuries happened all the time, and two drowning incidents had occurred during the last rainy season. All this pain and exertion for what? Sometimes only a few specks of gold after all the ore had been washed at the end of the day. But every once in a while, a dazzling amount of the glittering yellow metal was found, and then it all seemed worth it again.     The boys coordinated smoothly with each other. Kudzo shoveled soft, clayey gravel rapidly into a wide shallow pan, which Gbedema snatched from between his feet and lifted onto Dzigbodi's head. On his way to the sluice box where Kweku washed the gravel, Dzigbodi would pass Kwame going in the opposite direction to pick up his new load from Kudzo. Throughout the day, they would rotate positions. It was like a dance.     At intervals, they chattered noisily with one another to break the grinding monotony, sometimes making crude jokes at each other's expense, and at other times shouting encouragement when one of them flagged. They depended on each other to keep going. Occasionally an argument might break out, but it was seldom more than fleeting.     Kudzo glanced up to see Wei on his phone again--not talking, just calling, but then he put it away when apparently no one answered. He was probably trying to get hold of his brother again. Where was Bao?     At the top of the pit on the side where they were working, the earth was a light brown with an orange tinge, in contrast to the gray-and-black beneath it--as if someone had recently dumped soil taken from a different area. Kudzo was sure it had not been that way the day before, and he remarked on it to his friends. They concurred with him but there was no time to give it that much thought, and they soon forgot about Kudzo's observation.     He might have put the light-colored soil out of his mind had some of it not caved in as the darker gravel was dug away from underneath. Kudzo didn't want this kind of earth because it was usually poor in gold, so he began pushing it aside with his shovel. The blade struck something dull, relatively soft and immovable. He hit it a couple more times to dislodge it, but it didn't budge. Now Kudzo saw a dark spot in the light soil. Frowning, he cleared some of the earth away.     "What are you doing?" Kwame shouted in Twi, annoyed at Kudzo's break in the rhythm.     "Something is here," Kudzo returned. "I don't know what it is."     Kwame joined his partner to help clear away the soil from around the object. The other two boys, curious, came over to watch. Kudzo felt a shiver travel down his back. Something about the object made him uneasy.     Wei, who was on his phone again and had seen them cease work, walked quickly in their direction. "Hey!" he yelled. "What you doing?"     Dzigbodi pointed at what Kudzo and Kwame were unearthing. Wei jumped down into the pit to get a closer look. "Dig more," he instructed them, as if he were contributing anything new to what they were already doing.     As they saw what it was, Kudzo gave an exclamation of shock. Kwame tried to stand up, but slipped in the mud instead. It was clear now. The object was a human head. Wei grabbed a shovel and began to help scoop the soil away. As the eyes and nose came into view, he let out a cry. Kwame scrabbled out of the pit in fear, but Kudzo wrenched himself out of his paralysis and used his shovel to help Wei pull earth away from the head. Now one shoulder was visible. Wei was weeping and babbling hysterically in Chinese. Kudzo already knew the truth, but it had a dreamlike quality. The dead man buried deep in gold ore was Bao Liu, Wei's brother. Excerpted from Gold of Our Fathers by Kwei Quartey All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.