Wednesday, March 18, 2020

Book Review: The Butchering Art by Lindsey Fitzharris



The Butchering Art

Author: Lindsey Fitzharris
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Date of Publication: October 17, 2017
Pages: 304

"New opinions are always suspected, and usually opposed,
without any other reason but because they are not already common."
- John Locke



     The Butchering Art is a totally captivating work of creative non-fiction, made even more remarkable by the fact that it represents the first book written by author Lindsey Fitzharris.  The author received a PhD. in the History of Science, Medicine and Technology from Oxford University in 2009.   Honors awarded to The Butchering Art include: Winner of the PEN/E.O. Wilson Prize for Literary Science Writing, Top 10 Science Books of Fall 2017 by Publisher's Weekly and a Best History Book of 2017 by "The Guardian."  In addition to this novel, the author has written for “The Guardian”, “The Lancet” and “New Scientist.”  She has a huge social media presence including a fascinating blog: "The Chirurgeon's Apprentice".  You can also follow her on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/DrLindseyFitzharris/ but be prepared for some graphic posts!  She also has many multi-media projects in progress including a British Television Series: "Medicine's Dark Secrets". 

     The Butchering Art is first and foremost a biography of Joseph Lister.  Lister was born on April 5,1827 in Wetsham, Essex, England to devout Quaker parents.   His father, Joseph Jackson Lister was a great devotee of the microscope and developed the "achromatic lens" which reduced distortions.  Young Lister was very interested in his father's microscope and became proficient in its use.  He announced he wanted to be a surgeon, at that time a profession held in low regard.  He attended the University College of London, beginning in 1844.  Lister was noted to be hardworking and diligent, despite the poor reputation of medical students of the day (who were described as “lawless, exuberant, and addicted to nocturnal activities” in one journal).  Lister brought a microscope with him although the use of that instrument in medical studies was more accepted in Paris than in London.  The author describes the conditions in the medical school in the 1840s.  First, there was no protective gear in the “dissecting rooms” or anatomy labs.  Students routinely went directly from their cadavers to their living patients without so much as washing their hands.  Also, there were two schools of thought in the field of infectious disease: Contagionists, who believed in an "agent of disease" vs. Anti-contagionists, or miasmatists, who believed that diseases were transmitted through the air via poisonous vapors.  Only four types of infections were recognized: eryspielas, hospital gangrene, pyemia and septicemia.  Post-operative infections were routine and mortality rates were very high.

     The author spends one chapter discussing the rapid urbanization and increased population density in London.  These conditions set the stage for more injuries and illnesses.  Lister was frustrated at the high mortality associated with surgery and was intent on finding the cause of infection and used his microscope to investigate.  He felt that something in the wound itself had to be at fault, not just the air around the patient.  Lister: "I examined microscopically the slough from one of the sores, and I made a sketch of some bodies of pretty uniform size which I imagined might be the materies morbi (morbid substances).  The idea that it was probably of parasitic nature was at that early period already present in my mind."

      Lister completed his surgical training and sat for examinations by the Royal College of Surgeons.  It was recommended that he tour European medical schools to learn more about recent advances.  His first stop on this tour was the University of Edinburgh to study with James Syme, renowned professor of surgery.  Syme had achieved quite a bit of notoriety for his economy of technique and time which he tried to achieve with nearly every form of operation he undertook.  Syme took special interest in Lister, who decided to stay in Scotland instead of pursuing appointments in London or resuming travels to Europe.  Lister was elected to membership in The Royal College of Surgeons of Scotland and advanced on staff of Dr. Syme.  Also, during this time he courted and married Syme's oldest daughter.  Lister then began a series of experiments on frogs to study effects of inflammation on wound healing.  He discovered that "a certain amount of inflammation as caused by direct irritation is essential to primary union.  Inflammation of a wound did not necessarily presage sepsis."  These are concepts which are central to wound healing physiology today.

     Lister applied for the position of Regius Professor of Clinical Surgery at the University of Glasgow and was recommended by Dr. Syme: "Lister has a strict regard for accuracy, extremely correct powers of observation and a remarkably sound judgment united to uncommon manual dexterity and a practical turn of mind."  While in Glasgow, Lister grew increasingly frustrated by his inability to prevent and manage septic conditions in his patients.  His case notes catalogue the questions plaguing him:  "11 P.M.  Query.  How does the poisonous matter get from the wound into the veins?  Is it that the clot in the orifices of the cut veins suppurates, or is poisonous matter absorbed by minute veins and carried into the venous trunks?"  He became an advocate of cleanliness in the hospital, even though his method for antisepsis was still to come.  At the same time as Lister was studying inflammation and infection, there were many surgeons in Europe interested in the high maternal post-partum mortality from "puerperal fever."  Alexander Gordon in Scotland wrote in 1789 that puerperal fever was secondary to contamination by the medical staff.  This idea was summarily rejected.  Oliver Wendell Holmes in America revived Gordon's ideas fifty years later and Ignaz Semmelweis in Vienna spoke of "cadaverous particles" which could be transmitted through medical students from the anatomy labs to the obstetrical wards.  He instituted a chlorine hand wash when leaving the anatomy lab and reduced incidence of puerperal fever.  In the 1840's it was proven that cholera was caused by contaminated sewage and not "miasma" or bad air and changed the view of how diseases spread.  In France, chemist Louis Pasteur showed that bacteria ruined fermentation in wine.  Finally, Lister applied this knowledge to the septic wound and proposed the application of antiseptic agents (first potassium permanganate and then carbolic acid) which greatly reduced the infection rate in surgically treated compound fractures.  Lister published his findings in “The Lancet” with a five-installment article which began on March 16, 1867.

     Lister's concepts and method were not immediately accepted.  There was conflict with James Y. Simpson, a noted gynecologist and the discoverer of Chloroform anesthetic.  First Dr. Simpson wrote a letter to “The Lancet” claiming Lister was only repeating studies already performed in Europe and secondly that his own method of preventing infection, acupressure, was more effective.  Lister repeatedly defended antisepsis, pointing to the strict scientific method with which he had reached his conclusions.  Lister's method was also rejected by another distinguished London surgeon, James Padgett, who did note, however, that he might not have been applying the method correctly.
     
     In 1869 Dr. Syme passed away and Lister returned to Edinburgh to take his place.  There was still a debate regarding the efficacy of Lister's method.  Improved mortality rates were attributed to better ventilation, improved diet and improvements in nursing rather than antiseptic technique.  However, Lister's students became believers and marveled at Lister's continued experimentation and constant adjustments to his antiseptic technique.  His students, who came to be known as "Listerians", realized the value of experimentation in medicine and that observational acuity and accuracy could lead to improvements in surgery.  Lister's method gained traction with surgeons in Europe, particularly Richard von Volkmann in Germany and gradually gained acceptance in Britain.  Lister then went on to develop the atomizer, a device to spray carbolic acid into the air to reduce bacteria.

     In 1871 Lister was called to care for Queen Victoria who was suffering with a large axillary abscess.  He used his carbolic acid atomizer on the Queen and then drained the infection.  When he noted further drainage on the first post-operative day, he improvised a new treatment.  He soaked some rubber tubing in carbolic acid and placed it into the wound.  The Queen recovered and this was the first use of a surgical drain!

      In 1876 Lister was invited to speak in America where his methods were greeted with much skepticism.  His presentation in Philadelphia was criticized by Samuel Gross: "Little, if any faith, is placed by any enlightened or experienced surgeon on this side of the Atlantic in the so-called treatment of Professor Lister."  Listerism gradually gained acceptance in America and Massachusetts General became the first hospital in America to make institutional use of carbolic acid as a surgical antiseptic.  Lister's method became universally accepted during his lifetime.  He died in 1912 as a hero of medicine and science.

     Interestingly, the change which occurred in surgery through Lister's efforts have been immortalized in the art of Thomas Eakins.  Dr. Gross, who had espoused the contrarian view to Listerism in Philadelphia, commissioned a painting by Eakins entitled "The Gross Clinic":

                                                        
      
 In this painting, Dr. Gross is operating on the femur of a young man with osteomyelitis.  There are unsterilized instruments displayed and one of the surgical assistants is seen probing the wound with his bare and bloody fingers.  Twenty years later Eakins painted "The Agnew Clinic":

                                       
                                             

In contrast, this painting shows the embodiment of antisepsis and hygiene.  It is a cleaner and brighter surgical theater with the surgeons wearing stark white coats rather than street clothes.             


     The Butchering Art is a meticulously researched scientific exercise and yet it reads like a novel.  It is one of those rare books which educates and at the same time entertains.  It is a biography of Joseph Lister, a history of medicine as it struggles to enter the modern age, a historical monograph describing London, Edinburgh and Glasgow in the mid 1800's and a socio-economic treatise describing urbanization, poverty and social injustice in the Victorian era.  It is a long book, but I recommend it highly.  Dr. Fitzharris' next book will be a similar treatment of Sir Harold Gillies and the development of the specialty of reconstructive plastic surgery.





       




                                                       
   


                                          


Wednesday, March 11, 2020

Book Review: Truth Over Fear: Combatting the Lies about Islam by Charles Kimball



Truth Over Fear: Combating the Lies About Islam

Author: Charles Kimball
Publisher: Westminster John Knox Press
Date of Publication: August 20, 2019
Pages: 158

     This little book is exactly what it purports to be.  It is a primer of basic and accurate information about Islam and gives the reader a fundamental knowledge base to be able to begin to comprehend the broad similarities as well as the intrinsic differences between Islam, Christianity and Judaism.  More importantly, Truth Over Fear allows the reader to listen critically to politicians, news media and other speakers and be able to spot the distortions and misrepresentations (as well as outright untruths) about Islam.  We used this book in our adult Sunday School at Outer Banks Presbyterian Church to begin a study of comparative religions and to initiate a program to promote inter-faith dialogue in our community.  The book was very successful in stimulating constructive, positive discussions and understanding about Islam.

     Charles Kimball is the Presidential Professor and Chair of the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Oklahoma in Norman, Oklahoma.  He has extensive experience living and working in the Middle East and has worked tirelessly to promote interfaith understanding and dialogue.  He has written other books which are useful in small group settings, including When Religion Becomes Evil: Five Warning Signs, published in 2008.

     In the author's Introduction, he discusses the misinformation promulgated by politicians, religious leaders and others and suggests that we need a new paradigm for thinking about and interacting with Muslims.  In the first chapter he gives us constructive religious responses to Islamophobia and discusses the Biblical mandate for positive interfaith relationships.  Chapter Two gives a very good explanation of the Five Pillars of Islam.  The Five Pillars are: Statement of Faith, Five Daily Prayers, Fasting, Alms Giving and Hajj, or holy pilgrimage.  Kimball in this chapter also iterates the similarities and differences between Islam and Judaism as well as Christianity.  He stresses that Muslims consider their God (the Arabic word for God is Allah) to be the same God of Abraham and Isaac.  Muhammad's revelations from God are thought to be the final ones in the line that started with Abraham and continued through Moses and the Prophets of the Old Testament and Jesus in the New Testament.  Jesus is seen as one of the great prophets but in Islam, Jesus is not considered divine (neither is Muhammad).  Islam does not believe in the Resurrection of Jesus and does not believe in the Trinity.  The Five Pillars, however, stress many of the fundamental concepts of the Judeo-Christian tradition, taking care of the less fortunate being just one.

     Chapter Three is entitled: "Conflict and Cooperation" and traces the development of attitudes towards Islam, Muhammad and Muslims in general from the time of Muhammad (around 620 A.D.) until the late 20th Century.  In a very succinct summary, Kimball presents the geographic, economic and political forces which created a fearful and extremely hostile perception of Islam in Europe.  The writings of Dante and Martin Luther are used as examples of the negative dialogue which prevailed.  Enlightenment and Post-Enlightenment thought represented a softening of the negative rhetoric about Islam, but the stereotypical representations of Islam as militant and evil remained.

     Chapter Four is entitled "The World We Actually Live In" and stresses the complexity of the world's religions (including Islam) today and how few people (especially those in charge of foreign policy) understand these complexities.  Kimball states that generic remedies for real or perceived problems include thinly veiled racism or bigotry aimed at groups deemed inferior (such as Muslims) and that people faith and goodwill must be willing to challenge the easy stereotypes and deeply rooted biases about Islam and its 1.7 billion followers.  We saw in the previous chapter how these stereotypes and biases evolved over centuries.  In this chapter the author discusses the diversity in Islam including the differences between Sunnis and Shi'ites and even differences within these sub-groups.  He also gives a cincise definition of Sharia and Jihad and clears up many misconceptions about both.  He ends this chapter with a discussion of Islam in America.

     The concluding two chapters enumerate how interfaith dialogue and improved relations have been attempted on an international scale and how that can be brought to the community and congregation level.  Kimball notes how the Christian mission mandate has changed over the last 50 years which corresponds to the great ecumenical efforts of the World Council of Churches and the Roman Catholic Church through the directives of Vatican II.   Mission work is now seen as an ecumenical effort to witness, serve and dialogue rather than proselytize and convert.  Interestingly, Islam is also a missionary religion which comes directly from the Five Pillars.

     Kimball does not ignore the radical Muslim extremists responsible for the attacks of 9/11 as well as the horrible activities in Afghanistan and elsewhere.   He discusses this and notes that other religious traditions (including Christianity) have extremists as well.  He notes that "Knowing something of the fullness of one's own religious tradition makes it easier to continue to think generically of its ideal and assign repugnant behavior to the marginal extremes."  In other words, it's easy to dismiss these extremists as "not true Christians" or "not true Muslims".  The author further states: "you cannot remove large groups of people with whom you disagree from your broader religious community."  In order to understand these concepts of extremism and how to react to it, our class is next going to study Reza Aslan's Beyond Fundamentalism: Confronting Extremism in the Age of Globalization.  Stay tuned for more on this topic.



     In summary, Kimball's book is an excellent starting point.  If you stop here you will have a basic understanding of Islam and be able to confront the erroneous statements made by less informed individuals.  It is also a great jumping off point to learn more about the world we live in today.  I recommend it highly.

Sunday, February 23, 2020

Book Review: After the Plague by T.C. Boyle



After the Plague

Author: T. C. Boyle
Publisher: Viking Adult
Date of Publication: September 2, 2001
Pages: 256 (Hardcover)


     This eclectic collection of short stories is about as good as it gets.  There are sixteen collected tales here which range from poignant to sublime.  Each story is packed with eccentric characters in difficult and often very odd situations.  There are normal people thrust out of their comfort zones,  older folks not coping with loneliness and depression and young lovers failing to accept or even realize the consequences of their actions.

     Stories are told from unique points of view, some from minor characters and even one narrated by a deceased spouse!  What is the constant in these stories is the superb writing: word craft of the highest order.  The opening sentences grab the reader and thrust you smack into the middle of the tale.  Consider this opening sentence from "Friendly Skies":

     "When the engine under the right wing began to unravel a thin skein of greasy, dark smoke, Ellen peered out the abraded Plexiglas window and saw the tufted clouds rising up and away from her and knew she was going to die."

     Even though this collection is a bit dated (published almost twenty years ago) the author has showcased timeless issues: anger management, sexism, ageism, class status and struggles with unmet expectations in relationships.  The star of this collection, though, is the writing which is timeless.  I highly recommend this collection and anything else written by this superb author.

Tuesday, January 21, 2020

Book Review: The Room of White Fire by T. Jefferson Parker




The Room of White Fire

Author: T. Jefferson Parker
Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
Date of Publication: August 22, 2017 (Hardcover)
July 3, 2018 (Paperback)
Pages: 352

     T. Jefferson Parker is an accomplished author who has won 3 Edgar Awards: Best Mystery Novel Edgars in 2002 (Silent Joe) and 2005 (California Girl) and a 2009 Best Short Story Edgar for Skinhead Central.   I have read and enjoyed a number of his earlier books, including the two award winners, but have not read any of his recent work.  That will change after reading The Room of White Fire.

     This book starts a new series featuring former Marine, former boxer, former sheriff and current private investigator Roland Ford.  Ford is hired to find a young Air Force veteran who has escaped from a private Southern California psychiatric facility.  Clay Hickman is the escapee from a facility named simply Arcadia.  He is also the son of a prominent local builder and a veteran of war in the Middle East.  He harbors dark secrets from his time in the service.

     As Ford begins his investigation he encounters a wide cast of characters, including Hickman's psychiatrist, fellow patients at Arcadia and some shady security people at the facility.  He finds out that Arcadia is owned and operated by Briggs Spencer, a former military psychologist who literally wrote the book on enhanced interrogation techniques (water boarding, etc...).  Spencer worked as an independent contractor during the war on terror.  Ford eventually pieces together that Hickman did not spend his time in the service in Iraq as everyone, including his family, believed, but was in Romania at a secret prison and interrogation facility working for Briggs. 

     What follows is a three dimensional cat and mouse game between Ford, Hickman and Briggs and his security forces.  Fearing what Hickman knows and is willing to expose, Briggs is willing to go to any lengths to silence him.  Ford is the proverbial man in the middle.  The truly anguishing part of The Room of White Fire is the descriptions of the tortures inflicted in Romania and the long lasting effects it has had on the perpetrators.  This is an uncomfortable fact that the author boldly confronts.

     Like in his award winners, Parker uses Southern California as his canvas.  His descriptions of San Diego and the county lend a steady realism to this fast paced story.  His characters are all complex and well developed.  They each have their own set of demons.  Since this is the first installment for Roland Ford, the author tells us a lot of his backstory, all of which is interesting and adds dimension to this otherwise prototypical "tough guy" investigator.

     I'm glad that I re-discovered T. Jefferson Parker.  While The Room of White Fire doesn't really approach Silent Joe or California Girl (or Laguna Heat for that matter) it is a splendidly written story with an important social message to boot!

Book Review: Heart of Ice by Gregg Olsen



Heart of Ice

Author: Gregg Olsen
Publisher: Kensington
Date of Publication: March 1, 2009 (Hardcover)
March 28, 2017 (Mass Market Paperback)
Pages: 480

     Gregg Olsen has written many wonderful books, both fiction and non-fiction.  Unfortunately, Heart of Ice isn't one of his better efforts.  This novel is really two stories which seem totally unrelated until the very conclusion.  
      
     The first story is about a missing pregnant wife with an irascible and totally unlikable husband (who quickly becomes the solitary person of interest).  The investigation into the disappearance is led by small town sheriff Emily Kenyon.  Sheriff Kenyon is dealing with several personal issues, including a recently college graduated daughter who is traveling the country as a national representative of a sorority, an ex-boyfriend who happens to be a local defense attorney and all-around cad, and a new love interest that despite his obvious perfection, she just can't commit to. 

     The second story is a serial killer tale regarding a young man with a seemingly perfect life (wife, kids, steady job, etc...) who preys on sorority girls.  A lot of this story is told in flashbacks of the killer's tumultuous childhood in foster homes where he suffered countless acts of cruelty and abuse.  The motive for the killings (which don't seem to make much sense throughout the book) is not revealed until very late.  The modus operandi of the killer is described in graphic and gory detail.

     The book does have its strengths.  The settings are the Pacific Northwest, areas in and around San Diego, California and a few chapters in Tennessee.  The author aptly uses descriptions of locales to create mood and (often) a sense of dread.  He has done his research regarding the effects on adults of childhood abuse.  The sections dealing with the killer's and his sister's abandonment by their mother at Disney Land are particularly heart breaking.  

     The weakness are several.  First, I found the characters fairly stereotypical and in the case of the many minor characters, very quickly and inadequately developed.  Second, the two disparate plots are disconnected throughout most of the book creating a disjointed story line.  Just as the reader gets drawn in to one story line, the next few chapters will jump back to the other.  I found that distracting and frustrating to say the least.  Finally, the love entanglements of Sheriff Kenyon made this seem like a romance novel in spots, which is not my cup of tea.

     In summary, this book had its high points but all in all was disappointing to me.

Thursday, January 9, 2020

Book Review: Florida by Lauren Groff



Florida

Author: Lauren Groff
Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
Date of Publication: June 5, 2018
Pages: 288 (Hardcover Edition)

    This is the second collection of short stories for this author (she published Delicate Edible Birds in 2009).  She also has published three novels.  This outstanding collection was published in 2018 and won the Story Prize and was a finalist for the National Book Award, Kirkus Prized and Southern Book Prize.  The author now lives in Gainesville and Florida paints a vivid and somewhat unflattering picture of her home state.  This is a "warts and all" view of the Sunshine State.

     There are eleven gripping stories here, all dealing with aspects of contemporary life.  There are treatments of homelessness, caring for aging parents, strained marriages, work-life imbalance and single parenting.  There is also an undercurrent in several stories of overpopulation and encroachment of development on natural territories   All of the stories are told with an economy of words but with striking description.

In Ghosts and Empties a young mother walks nightly in her new neighborhood after putting her children to bed:  "On my nighttime walks, the neighbors' lives reveal themselves, the lit windows domestic aquariums."

In "Flower Hunters" a woman on vacation in a remote cabin with two small children (while her husband is at home working) endures a violent summer storm: "The rain knocks at the metal roof, and she imagines it licking away at the limestone under her house, the way her children lick away at Everlasting Gobstoppers, which they are not allowed, but which she still somehow finds in sticky rainbow pools in their sock drawers."

In "Yport" the author describes the climate in her home state: "Florida in the summer is a slow hot drowning."  Later, the main character who is doing research on a book about Guy de Maupassant describes the town of Yport, France : "Look!  she tells them, gesturing up the harbor at a little cluster of nineteenth-century houses on the other side of the channel, which huddle together, distrustful of the twenty-first century industry around them."

   In summary, this is an outstanding collection of stories, exquisitely written with evocative descriptions.  Florida features many contemporary social issues woven into the fabric of entertaining and gripping stories.

Tuesday, April 23, 2019

2019 Best Novel Edgar Award - Updated



     Only to Sleep by Lawrence OsborneThe Liar's Girl by Catherine Ryan HowardHouse Witness by Mike LawsonDown to the River Unto the Sea by Walter Mosley,  A Gambler's Jury by Victor Methos and A Treacherous Curse by Deanna Raybourne are the six novels nominated for the 2019 Best Mystery Novel Edgar Award.  I have reviewed each individually and you can read those reviews by clicking on each link.  The Mystery Writers of America announced the 2019 winner on April 25.  My pick is as follows:

     First let me say that I enjoyed every one of these novels and that is not the case for all Edgar nominees in previous years.  Each novel has its unique strengths and every one was entertaining.  Here's a condensed review of each nominee:


     The quality of the writing and the ringing clarity of the descriptions of everything from the characters to the setting keep the reader turning the pages even when the plot lags a bit.  Staying true to the "bewilderingly dreamlike plots" of Raymond Chandler makes the pace of this almost glacial in spots.  The splendid writing, however, saves the day.






     Set in Victorian London, this book is a cat and mouse game of puzzling clues and misdirection.  The book has exciting twists of plot and a tumultuous ending.  A Treacherous Curse was the one novel of the six which I though I would enjoy the least, but it was great.  I read it quickly and would recommend it highly.







     The setting for A Gambler's Jury is Salt Lake City and its surrounding counties.  This is a nice change from the usual Los Angeles or New York locales for mystery novels.  The author, a seasoned criminal-defense and civil-rights lawyer himself, deftly describes the peculiarities of the justice system in Utah.  The characters are all very human and very believable.  The ending has a neat twist of plot which was actually fairly predictable almost from the outset.  I enjoyed A Gambler's Jury and found it to be a very worthy nominee for the 2019 Edgar for best mystery novel.  I will look forward to reading other books by this author.



     Mike Lawson actually has you rooting for the bad guys (although who the bad guys are in this book is a fluid notion).  The plot is so believable, the characters are so exceptionally well developed, the pace is so fast (though not hurried) and the dialogue is so genuine that the book is nearly impossible to put down.  Add to this the New York setting and in my opinion you have the perfect crime novel!  If Ed McBain was alive and writing, he would have written House Witness.  This book is that good!





     Read Down the River unto the Sea by Walter Mosley for the spectacular writing.  Read it because of the astute social commentaries contained within.  Read it because it is a great story.  Read it because it may very well be the 2019 Edgar Award winner for the best mystery novel of the year.  Just read it!








    This is a serial killer story with a twist.  A man is in jail for murders committed ten years ago.  When new murders occur, are they copycats or is the wrong man in jail?  I really enjoyed the author's descriptions of Dublin and Cork, two places I have never been but would love to visit.  They added a lot to what is a very enjoyable and entertaining mystery.  This is a worthy nominee for the 2019 Best Novel Edgar.  






     I enjoyed every one of these novels.  They are all worthy of nomination and any could win the Edgar for Best Mystery Novel.  My pick, however, would be Mike Lawson's House Witness.  The combination of tight plotting, great dialogue and superb character development made it my favorite.  My second place (and just as good, really) is Walter Mosley's Down the River Unto the Sea.  We will see which is the actual winner later this week!

   Well, I was half right.  The Mystery Writers of America chose Walter Mosley's Down the River Unto the Sea as the 2019 Edgar Award Winner for the Best Mystery Novel.  I can't disagree but would reiterate that all of the nominees were worthy of nomination and quite capable of being the award winner.