Don’t Forget Me, Little Bessie, by James Lee Burke.
James Lee Burke is very proud of this book. He’s an old man now, but doesn’t care a bit, for his memories are of a Texas and real-life characters that dominated the landscape of his youth, and age (he is 89) cannot dim his wonderful artistry with words. Burke has written several series, including those featuring fearless Texas Ranger Hackberry Holland; now he would like to introduce us to Bessie Holland, Hackberry’s 14 year-old daughter when this story begins. It is also the start of the 1914-1918 War, so world-wide trouble is brewing, even though America’s President has kept them out of it so far.
Such
lofty worries are beyond Bessie’s experience or interest at the moment; after her mother’s death her father Hackberry
has hit the booze and owes money everywhere:
she is faced with problems she is too young and ill-equipped to handle –
BUT! She refuses to be daunted by the
fact that her father is a drunk, her brother will run away from home, leaving
her entirely alone, but not before White-trash Jubal Fowler wrecks one of his
eyes with a slingshot. No, her attempts
to gain an education at the tiny local
school have been ruined because the gifted teacher whom she adores has been
sacked ‘for lewd behaviour with another woman’.
Bessie
is outraged – women’s rights are non-existent anyway; they are no more than servants in every
capacity. Well, she’ll follow her
brother Cody’s example and leave home too:
she’ll follow him to New York and the Lower East Side (whatever that may
be); anything would be better than her
current location. She thinks.
True
to form, she finds that her good looks generate plenty of attention, even from
a ‘gentleman’ by the name of Anthony Vale who, after courting her perfectly (he
seems to have lots of money) rapes her most cruelly, then makes sure she loses
her employment. He likes playing with
people, but he has reckoned without good Baptist Bessie’s outrage at her
treatment, or her father Hackberry’s thirst for revenge. Anthony Vale’s days are numbered.
Father
and daughter return to Texas and find that their 200 acres have lots of oil
waiting to be pumped from the ground – which presents its own problems for a
good Baptist and a Texas Ranger who has given up the Demon Drink; the tension never lifts and the Baddies never
stop coming, from corrupt sheriffs and old enemies like Mexican Joe, a sadist
who cuts up people because ‘he feels like it’.
And he feels like getting rid of Bessie by the nastiest of means; she’s in his way.
Fortunately
for us, Bessie narrates the story so she’s still there at the end of this
brilliant, almost unbearably suspenseful chronicle of a young State in an old
country. James Lee Burke can be
justifiably proud of his work, which teems with unforgettable and authentic
characters. He just better live forever! SIX STARS.
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