Robin Yocum's Favorite Sons Reviewed By Beth Burke Of Bookpleasures.com
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Beth Burke
Reviewer Beth Burke: Beth is a college
professor and
freelance editor. She recently retired as a homeschooling mom when
her son graduated high school. Her love of books spans half a
century, during which time she has read from a wide range of genres. In her free time she creates quilts and tends to a garden.
By Beth Burke
Published on May 20, 2011
Publisher: Arcade Publishing ISBN: 978-1-61145-004-0
Click Here To Purchase Favorite Sons: A Novel
Author: Robin YocumPublisher: Arcade Publishing ISBN: 978-1-61145-004-0
One of the most tried and true axioms of fiction writing is “write about what you know.” In Favorite Sons,
author Robin Yocum does just that with stellar results. The story drew
me in from the start and never faltered in its credibility while sifting
through topics of justice , revenge, corruption, and self realization. The
convincing stories, stated as facts, and the well-drawn characters are
what immersed me in the book. I think that his experience as a
journalist works in Yocum’s favor in that his writing is clear and
concise, and although descriptive, not in a way that made me think of
flowery prose. He makes every word count while still achieving a
crispness that is the hallmark of good journalists.
The
setting for the action is the author’s native east Ohio, and as a
fellow Buckeye, I can attest to his meticulous attention to creating the
scenery accurately. Anyone who hasn’t driven through that part of the
state will find Yocum’s descriptions of the area to be colorful, and
anyone who has traveled the routes he maps out will know exactly where
the characters are headed. The story’s plot is familiar territory to the
former reporter for the Columbus Dispatch.
Yocum’s experience on the crime beat lends an authenticity to the
procedural aspects. I wondered if some of the elements in the story line
and the anecdotal cases he refers to reflected a composite of those he
investigated during his newspaper career, as some of the characters
resembled headliners from the past. But, given that the stories involve
murder, depravity, and politicians, they might be written from any time
or place.
The premise of Favorite Sons
may sound like a stock setup: four young friends are involved in
covering up an accidental death that in later years threatens to be
their downfall. But where Yocum has enhanced the plot is in his skillful
characterization, especially that of the narrator, Hutch Van Buren. We
see how his trajectory through life has been influenced by the secret he
kept. Where the author succeeds best is in not surprising the reader by
Van Buren’s actions and attitudes, even after the passage of 30-plus
years. Likewise, what Yocum exposes about the others who were complicit
rings true because of the solid foundation he builds in making his
characters three-dimensional.
It’s rare to find a book that doesn’t fail on some level, but this is one I read without a hint of disappointment. Click Here To Purchase Favorite Sons: A Novel