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All Men Fear Me

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"Casey's skill at making you care about the injustices of a time and place not often covered in history books is second to none. The admirable mystery is the cherry on top." —Kirkus Reviews

The U.S. has finally entered the First World War and scheduled the first draft lottery. No one in Boynton, Oklahoma, is unaffected by the clash between rabid pro-war, anti-immigrant "patriots" and anti-conscription socialists who are threatening an uprising rather than submit to the draft.

Alafair Tucker is caught in the middle when her brother, a union organizer for the Industrial Workers of the World, pays her a visit. Rob Gunn is fresh out of an internment camp for participants in an Arizona miners' strike. He assures Alafair that he's only come to visit family, but she's not convinced. More unsettling, Alafair's eldest son enlists, and a group calling itself the "Knights of Liberty" vandalizes the farm of Alafair's German-born son-in-law.

Alafair's younger son, 16-year-old Charlie, is wildly patriotic and horrified by his socialist uncle. With his father's permission, Charlie takes a part-time war job at the Francis Vitric Brick Company. Soon several suspicious machine breakdowns delay production, and a couple of shift supervisors are murdered. Everyone in town suspects sabotage, some blaming German spies, others blaming the unionists and socialists. But Charlie Tucker is sure he knows who the culprit is and comes up with a plan to catch him red-handed.

And then there is old Nick—a mysterious guy in a bowler hat who's been hanging around town.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 31, 2015
      America’s entry into WWI provides the backdrop for Casey’s absorbing eighth Alafair Tucker mystery (after 2014’s Hell with the Lid Blown Off). Passions run high in the small town of Boynton, Okla., the home of Alafair, her husband, and their 10 children. Patriotic zealot Emmanuel Clover, a Council of Defense member, is on the lookout for those not doing their bit for the war effort. In contrast, Dutch Leonard, a member of the Industrial Workers of the World labor union, opposes the far-off war. Innocent civilians such as German-born Kurt Lukenbach, Alafair’s son-in-law, and grocer Aram Khouri are caught in the general distrust of foreigners and socialists by hotheads like Billy Claude Walker. The arrival of Alafair’s IWW-activist brother, Rob Gunn, coincides with the unrest, acts of sabotage at the local brick works, and murder. In the middle of it all is “old Nick,” a ubiquitous stranger feasting on the conflicts and fanning the flames. Casey vividly evokes a tumultuous moment in U.S. history.

    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2015
      When the U.S. enters World War I, hate and suspicion triumph over rational thought. Alafair Tucker, her husband, Shaw, and their 10 children live in rural Boynton, Oklahoma. Naturally, Alafair is worried about her sons being drafted, but she never suspects that a visit from her brother, Rob Gunn, will cause problems with people she's known for years. Rob is a union organizer who's lying low after his release from an internment camp for his involvement in an Arizona miners' strike. While everyone waits to hear whose number has come up in the draft, strife breaks out between the pro-war patriots, who think anyone with a foreign-sounding name is a spy, and the anti-war socialists, some of whom want to march on Washington and take over the government. Alafair's oldest son, Gee Dub, is a college student willing to do his duty. Her only other boy, 16-year-old Charlie, a firebrand unable to enlist, takes a job in a local brick factory while keeping up with his chores at home. Henry Blackwood, who's staying with his uncle after having arrived on the same train as Rob and a mysterious stranger, becomes Charlie's friend at the factory, where sabotage creates problems in meeting government orders. A black-robed pro-war group, the Knights of Liberty, is vandalizing property owned by so-called foreigners, including Alafair's German-born son-in-law. When one of the Knights is found with his throat cut, Rob comes under suspicion. The Tuckers' relationship with the sheriff keeps him out of jail, but Alafair, who has prior sleuthing experience (Hell With the Lid Blown Off, 2014, etc.), takes matters into her own hands to find the killer before more trouble comes to her family. Casey's skill at making you care about the injustices of a time and place not often covered in history books is second to none. The admirable mystery is the cherry on top.

      COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      October 1, 2015

      The eighth book in the series (Hell with the Lid Blown Off) introduces strong-willed Alafair Tucker to a new set of problems (sabotage, vandalism, murder) to solve when her brother Rob, a union organizer who had been detained in Arizona after participating in a strike, visits. The United States has just entered World War I and patriotism in Boynton, OK, is running at fever pitch.

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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