cover image AN AFFAIR OF HONOR

AN AFFAIR OF HONOR

Richard Marius, . . Knopf, $26.95 (608pp) ISBN 978-0-375-41239-4

In the early 1950s, Bourbonville, Tenn., becomes a crucible for moral self-examination and religious debate, as a double murder forces the community to confront dizzying changes in the fabric of life since WWII. When Hope Kirby murders his wife and her lover, he is following the code of the hills and the orders of his father. Unfortunately, 20-year-old Charles Alexander, an aspiring Baptist preacher of already wavering faith, happens upon the crime scene. Hope's code doesn't condone killing an innocent boy, so he lets Charles live after exacting from him a promise of silence. But Charles is not able to keep his secret, and soon the town is consumed by the drama of a murder trial. Hope is a war hero, and there is strong sympathy for him even though his guilt is evident. But he begins to see that his code has served him poorly, that he has been changed by the violence in his life and that indeed the world has changed since his family was forced off their land in the mountains. Charles too must face the weakness of his faith and the many quiet hypocrisies of his life. Others touched by the tragedy face similar crises of faith: rival preachers at neighboring Baptist churches clash in their advice to Charles even as they repress damning secrets of their own pasts. The sheriff and prison guards question the honor of their duties, and the Kirby brothers eventually oppose their father. Marius (The Coming of Rain; After the War), who died in 1999, confidently draws on history, psychology, theology, autobiographical detail and an obvious belief in his characters to bring them vividly to life in this lovingly captured time and place, where establishing the true history of events and personalities becomes as gripping as unmasking a murderer. (Aug.)