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priest

December 10, 2018 by Hilary MacLeod

Operation Wormwood
Helen C Escott
Flanker Press             

For the first time in social media, God began to trend.

With that line, Helen Escott provides a moment of light relief in an otherwise harrowing story of child molesting, corrupt priests and a vengeful God. Add to that murder, suicide, PTSD and spewing blood that challenges the puking in Rosemary’s Baby and you’ve got Operation Wormwood, a new thriller out of Newfoundland and Labrador.

The story takes hold immediately and doesn’t let the reader go until it’s over, featuring a plot peppered with philosophical questions, moral quandaries and personal nightmares. You might say, “my cup runneth over,” and you would be well in the spirit of this novel with its biblical quotations, religious refrains and a multiplicity of moral issues.

Archbishop Keating is admitted to hospital in St. John’s, Newfoundland, suffering from massive nosebleeds, agonizing pain and a thirst he can’t slake because water tastes like vinegar to him. Other victims suffer the same symptoms and check in at ER in St. John’s and in cities across Canada, afflicted by a plague that attacks men (and at least one woman) who have abused children.

It’s quickly established that, unlike a plague, the disease is not infectious. In fact, it’s limited. What the victims have in common is that they’re pedophiles.

The novel turns on two main possibilities: that the plague is a poison, wormwood, that someone is using against child molesters; or that God is the guilty one, visiting revenge on pedophiles with the creation of a disease that punishes them with merciless pain. Underscoring this suspicion is that the pain seems to be worse when the victims of abuse think about the torture they experienced at the hands of unscrupulous priests, teachers and other people in power.

Grappling with this mind-bending situation are Dr. Luke Gillespie, RCMP Sgt. Nick Myra and Father Peter Cooke. Dr. Gillespie considers himself duty-bound to treat these patients, distasteful as they are. He calls on doctors and hospitals nationwide to share information about the disease but a cure eludes him and one after another his unsavoury patients die. His is not a popular position. Many believe that wormwood is a justifiable plague against pedophiles.

Father Peter Cooke is one of them. For him, wormwood is a blessing.

He rallies the city’s Catholics to a mass of thanksgiving to the Lord for bringing this punishment down on the sinners. It brings the faithful back in droves to the church, grateful that #GODISBACK.

Cooke’s prayers have been answered, his church pews filled by the justice the Lord has meted out. For him, wormwood is the cure: divine punishment for the ungodly. It provides a worldwide boost for the Catholic Church that brings Cooke to the notice of the pope.

Sgt. Myra is not ready to accept the church’s view of what’s happening to pedophiles and mounts an investigation of the molesters and their victims, desperately seeking a common thread, a solution. Blood tests and common sense prove that it can’t be poisoning by a single serial killer or a string of multiple killers. But Myra doesn’t see the disease as the work of God either.

So what is it? To answer that here would be telling. The ending is, at the least, unexpected. It may not satisfy all readers.

The author asks readers to consider a host of moral dilemmas throughout the book and in the end tests their faith with a surprising conclusion. Or perhaps Escott has provided the ideal realistic ending; after all, in life, where are the easy solutions?

The casualties mount on the way to this uncertain conclusion, made the more surprising by the revelation of two characters suffering PTSD and finally a pair of suicides that add to the mountain of tragedy.

As a retired civilian member of the RCMP, Escott certainly knows her stuff. She took a decade to work on this book. It shows in her meticulous research and use of facts to flesh out a dark story of murder, abuse, suicide and human frailty.

Operation Wormwood is a story that pulls readers in at the very start, draws them through a frightening series of events and finally explodes, leaving them to question their own beliefs.

Filed Under: # 88 Winter 2018, Editions, Fiction, Reviews Tagged With: Church, Disease, Flanker Press, God, Helen C Escott, Hospital, Human Frailty, Newfoundland, Newfoundland and Labrador, Operation Wormwood, Pedophiles, Plague, priest, Religious, Social Media, St. John's, thriller, Wormwood

November 27, 2018 by Heather Fegan

Though the Heavens Fall
Anne Emery
ECW PressThe 

In the 10th installment of Anne Emery’s Collins-Burke mystery series, Though the Heavens Fall, lawyer Monty Collins and friend Father Brennan Burke are in Belfast, Northern Ireland. The year is 1995, nearing the end of The Troubles, a three-decade conflict (or violent guerilla war) over the status of Northern Ireland between nationalists (many Irish and Roman Catholic) and unionists (many British and Protestant).

The IRA has called a ceasefire and Monty is on assignment from Halifax with a Belfast law firm. Brennan is along to reconnect with family, some of who have long been entangled with the Northern Ireland Conflict and the provisional IRA. Despite the ceasefire, Monty and his wife Maura decide it’s safer for the family (Maura and their youngest kids, Normie and Dominic) to stay in Dublin during their stint in Ireland. Maura is on a leave of absence from her job as a professor at Dalhousie Law School and is lecturing at the University College of Dublin’s Law School and the kids are busy with school and their new nanny.

And so the stage is set for the mystery, crime, violence and confusion that ensues as the past inevitably rises up to haunt everyone involved. Monty is excited when the opportunity arises to take on some extra cases on the side. Criminal cases that are more his speed as a criminal defense lawyer. Cases the other lawyers in the firm won’t touch. Little does he know his seemingly innocent efforts to win a lawsuit for a deserving family will set in motion a series of events that will uncover unsolved crimes, bringing a very heavy price involving people he knows in Belfast.

Brennan happily goes about his time catching up with extended family and working in a new ministry with the added bonus of teaching music, his biggest passion, at Holy Cross Girls’ School. He’s positive and hopeful of the work his cousin Ronan Burke is pursuing, that of negotiating peace talks in an attempt to work out an agreement for Northern Ireland, despite resistance from both sides, and working towards a possible political role in a future peacetime government. Brennan is willing to help whenever he can, even endangering himself in the name of family, when light starts to shine on secrets from the dark and shady past.

It’s at the very start of the book, on a night out at the pubs in Belfast, when Monty and Brennan reflect on being “in a place now where justice and the rule of law have been taking a thumping for over twenty-five years.” They are certainly going to discover what exactly passes for law in 1995 Belfast.

This is a hefty book with a lot of history and a lot of politics. But it all comes together and the details are relevant. Emery explains legal proceedings clearly, without bogging us down in legalese.

It does take a bit of research (Google) to keep up with the Irish history if one is not familiar with it.

Emery develops a wide range of characters really well, from young Normie to the lawyer, to the priest to Northern Ireland insurgents.

Emery has said her scenes are often inspired by music or lyrics. In this case, it’s Irish traditional ballads along with IRA rebel songs. Elements of music and architecture, with several references throughout, are strong.

Monty becomes very brave, very early in the book, taking on criminal defence cases involving terrorism, murder and the IRA, meeting potential witnesses—strangers—in the woods. I questioned whether someone would really jump into this territory quite so quickly.

Brennan is an equally strong character. Monty and Brennan hide certain things from each other, crucial details with profound outcomes. One wonders what they thought would happen, becoming so deeply involved in such criminality. The story reads and feels so much like a detective mystery it’s hard to remember the characters are lawyers and priests turned sleuths.

Though the Heavens Fall keeps us on our toes until the bitter end. And based on that ending, the sequel will be a must-read too.

Filed Under: Fiction, Reviews, Web exclusives Tagged With: A Collins-Burke Mystery, Anne Emery, Arthur Ellis Award, Belfast, Crime, Dartmouth Book Award, ECW Press, Ireland, lawyer, mystery, Nationalists, Northern Ireland, Nova Scotia, priest, The Troubles, Though the Heavens Fall, Unionists

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