Late Rain By Lynn Kostoff

LateRain
“At bottom, everything’s a question of character. Always has been.” – Stanley Tedros

Characters, and issues of character, abound in the latest offering from author Lynn Kostoff, Late Rain. The sleepy, second tier resort town of Magnolia Beach, South Carolina wouldn’t seem to be the ideal setting for a drama of Shakespearean proportions, yet that is precisely what Kostoff delivers.

Corrine Tedros, unhappy with her husband’s lack of a sense of urgency in persuading his uncle, Stanley, to sell his highly profitable soft drink empire, decides to speed the process along…by hiring a hitman to take Stanley out of the picture.

Unfortunately for her, things don’t go quite as planned. First, the hitman strays from the carefully arranged script, leaving Corrine with a shaky alibi during the time of the killing. Second, Jack Carson, an elderly man suffering from Alzheimer’s, happens to witness the murder. Third, Officer Ben Decovic, a displaced Ohio homicide detective with something to prove, latches on to the case.

With that setup, Late Rain sounds like a straightforward crime story, right? Not so fast.

From the outset it quickly becomes apparent that the cast of Late Rain is a highly complicated bunch, each driven by their unique demons and desires. As the story is told in turns from several different characters’ perspectives, the reader is presented with an ever changing picture of the events as they unfold, never quite sure if what’s being relayed is the truth or a distorted version of it as seen through the prism of the characters’ personal motives.

Corrine, of course, is motivated by her desire to gain control of the company and, later, to get free from the very tangled web she’s helped weave. She also has a mysterious past, which is catching up with her at precisely the wrong time. Ben is trying to get his confidence as an investigator back after a killer’s random murder spree took the lives of five people, including his wife. In the wake of the tragedy Ben found that he had “lost his eye” for ferreting out criminals. He no longer trusted his instincts, so he resigned his position as a homicide detective in Ohio and moved to Magnolia Beach. His casual encounter with Corrine during the early stages of the investigation reignites those instincts; he just knows something’s not right with Corrine, and he’s determined to prove it.

And then we have Jack Carson and the hitman, Croy, both also unreliable narrators though for very different reasons. The snippets presented from Jack’s point of view, through the haze of his creeping Alzheimer’s, are painfully raw in capturing the essence of what it must be like to be caught in the throes of such a cruel disease. Can we really trust what Jack thinks he saw? Kostoff’s description of Jack’s feelings as he tries desperately to retain control of his increasingly traitorous mind is one of the most vivid analogies I’ve ever read:

It was like standing behind the wheel of a boat, far out at sea and waiting, against the immensity of the horizon, for the anchor you’d dropped to catch, but knowing through your fingertips on the wheel that it hadn’t, that in the depths below the hull, the anchor drifted and dragged, unable to find purchase.

Croy, too, suffers from some mental illness or personality disorder. Though Kostoff never specifies exactly what it is, the way it manifests in his behavior lead me to believe it was Asperger’s syndrome, which makes for a very unique perspective during Croy’s chapters. So despite having at least four first person perspectives presented, there is arguably not one that the reader can truly trust. Instead, Kostoff challenges the reader to make his own decision as to where the truth lies based on the combination of perspectives and the reader’s own judgment about each character’s motives and trustworthiness.

To that end, Late Rain is a book that definitely seems to engender strong feelings in those who read it, a fact amply demonstrated in the Do Some Damage discussion of the book on GoodReads. It’s well worth checking the discussion out – and feel free to join the group – but do be aware there are some spoilers in a few of the threads. Also worth checking out is a tremendously enjoyable podcast with Lynn Kostoff conducted by Do Some Damage’s Steve Weddle. Late Rain is covered, of course, but so are Kostoff’s other works and his thoughts on writing and the state of publishing in general.

You really need to treat yourself to this book. It’s one of the most impressive things I’ve ever read – yes, ever – and I can’t for the life of me figure out why Lynn Kostoff isn’t a household name. The way he weaves several fascinating subplots in the book together is nothing short of sublime, and his incredibly skilled, nuanced character development lifts Late Rain into the realm of genuine Southern Gothic literature. I sure hope the students at Francis Marion University appreciate that they have a master of the craft teaching them.

Late Rain is available from Tyrus Books. (ISBN: 978-1935562122).

Lynn Kostoff is a professor of English at Francis Marion University in Florence, South Carolina. He has also taught at the University of Alabama, Indiana State University, and Bowling Green State University in Ohio where he received his MFA in fiction. His previous novels are The Long Fall and A Choice of Nightmares. To learn more about Lynn, visit his website.

Late Rain was one of my Top 10 Reads of 2011

8 Comments

  • Elizabeth White reviews Late Rain | My Blog

    February 15, 2012 - 11:26 PM

    […] White reviewed Late Rain. An excerpt is below. The whole review can be found here. You really need to treat yourself to this book. It’s one of the most impressive things I’ve […]

  • […] of course, the audiobook of Late Rain has received an Audiofile Earphones Award. On top of that, reviewer Elizabeth White says “The man does not appear capable of producing anything less than […]

  • Charles Wingfield

    February 18, 2011 - 11:13 AM

    WOW, sounds like quite a book. I am totally intrigued with how the story is told by several different characters’ perspectives. Have to get this one!

    • Elizabeth A. White

      February 18, 2011 - 2:21 PM

      It’s incredibly well done. With all the different perspectives – all from unreliable narrators – it kinda feels like putting a jigsaw puzzle together without knowing what the picture’s supposed to look like. Challenging, but you really want to know what it’s gonna look like at the end.

  • Charlie Stella

    February 18, 2011 - 9:56 AM

    You really need to treat yourself to this book. It’s one of the most impressive things I’ve ever read – yes, ever – and I can’t for the life of me figure out why Lynn Kostoff isn’t a household name.

    Yes, definitely … on all counts. Lynn is one of our very best writers out there today.

    • Elizabeth A. White

      February 18, 2011 - 10:45 AM

      It’s so disheartening that such talented people toil in semi-obscurity while shit like A Shore Thing hits the bestseller lists. 🙁

  • Brian Lindenmuth

    February 18, 2011 - 9:46 AM

    I hope The Long Fall sees a reprint soon. While I love Late Rain (and we all know I do) and consider it to be Kostoff’s masterpiece it’s still Long Fall that winds up being my favorite.

    • Elizabeth A. White

      February 19, 2011 - 1:50 PM

      The man does not appear capable of producing anything less than greatness.

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