Bitterroot A novel

Suzy Vitello, 1961-

Book - 2024

"A forensic artist confronts a crime against her own family when her brother is shot when he hires an old friend as surrogate for his child, while MAGA politics, racism and violence rage in a small town in the Bitterroot Mountains of Idaho. Set in the fictional town of Steeplejack, nestled in the Bitterroot Mountains, Hazel Mackenzie provides law enforcement with sketch art and victim reconstruction following suspected crimes, through her one-woman business, Bitterroot Renderings. Trouble strikes twice when her husband dies in an accident and then soon after, her gay twin brother Kento is shot by a member of Steeplejack's growing anti-LBGTQ community during a gender reveal party. The party was coordinated by Corinda, the surrogate... hired by Kento and his husband, Tom. It was Corinda's estranged husband who pulled the trigger and subsequently abducts and brainwashes her into believing the lie that he shot Kento in self-defense as an edited video focuses on the antique Kwaiken knife in Kento's hand. As Hazel launches her brother's defense with help from an attorney friend, she finds the town she grew up in increasingly polarized and dangerous. When she uncovers an ugly secret about her late husband, it leads her to the discovery of letters written by her great-grandfather during the second world war. He was a first-generation Japanese-American who was recruited by the US military while the rest of the family was interned in a prison-like camp. Now, some eighty years later, the same racism and prejudice threatens to strip Kento and his husband of their basic rights to their baby. Hazel must now confront her own intergenerational trauma as she battles for herself, her brother, and a town that has been torn apart by hate"--

Saved in:
1 person waiting
1 copy ordered
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

In Vitello's novel, a young widow grapples with an attack on her family. The small former mining town of Steeplejack rests at the foot of Idaho's Bitterroot Mountains. It's there that Hazel Zapf was raised, and where she returns after some years away to marry her high school sweetheart, Ethan Mackenzie, and work as a forensic artist. "I draw dead and maimed bodies for a living," Hazel puts it simply. Of Japanese descent on her mother's side, Hazel likens the work to the tradition of Kusôzu, "the practice of capturing the beauty of a posthumous body's organic decomposition. It serves as a meditation on impermanence and transcendence." When, a few years into their marriage, Ethan is killed in a car accident, Hazel's first impulse is to draw his body, there in the morgue, as a way of processing the loss. Soon after Ethan's death, Hazel finds herself playing landlord to Corinda Blair, the surrogate mother of her gay twin brother's baby, a woman she has despised since high school. When that brother, Kento, is shot at the baby's gender reveal party by the surrogate's estranged husband, Hazel finds herself at the center of a trial that unleashes a flood of racism and resentment against her family that has been building for generations. Might the rediscovered letters of her great-grandfather, a Japanese American veteran whose family was interned during the Second World War, provide a lesson on how Hazel should move forward? Vitello's crystalline prose elegantly captures the numbing grief that grips Hazel for much of the novel. Here she describes her own awareness of it as she focuses on building a house in the aftermath of Ethan's death: "Even as the new house took shape, I remained frozen. Inert as a slug during summer's drought. The folks at Grief Group had finally stopped calling, and one day, I woke up to the realization that if I kept pushing folks away, I would, soon, be peopleless." These memorable characters nimbly embody the larger cultural forces at war in contemporary America. A gripping and emotionally intelligent tale of resentment and loss. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.