


A dense, brilliantly rendered novel by a new master of Southern gothic’ Kirkus
In this thrilling debut, Henry Wise transports readers to the Deep South, to a town poisoned by corruption and haunted by its past.
Will Seems has not returned to Euphoria, Virginia County, since his mother’s death. Now, taking a job as a Deputy Sheriff, he is forced to confront the turbid currents of this backwater town. Will is confronted by his past when a mysterious homicide claims the life of a close friend. The brutality of the crime serves as a grim reminder of the true reason for Will’s return — to atone for the past.
The local police rush to close the homicide case by arresting a man Will knows to be innocent and he faces a community that refuses to confront its history. Personal grievances and deep-seated prejudices undermine his every attempt to uncover the truth. Will’s hunt for answers leads him to Snakefoot, a dense wilderness long serving as a refuge for outcasts. It is here that old secrets lie buried, waiting to be unearthed.


Henry Wise is a graduate of the Virginia Military Institute and the University of Mississippi MFA program. A writer across multiple genres, his poetry has been published in Shenandoah, Radar Poetry, Clackamas, Nixes Mate Review, and elsewhere. His non-fiction and photography have appeared in Southern Cultures. Holy City is his first novel.
My thoughts: The tangled web of secrets, some dating back decades, that connect the residents of this small town continue to impact their present, even when they try running from them.
Will Seems is hiding a fugitive in the form of his childhood friend Sam, despite being a Sheriff’s Deputy, because he feels he owes him following a violent incident in their childhood. When another childhood friend is murdered, Will is desperate to prove that Sam’s father isn’t the killer, despite being caught fleeing the scene.
The Sheriff however is sure they’ve got their man, no motive, but plenty of circumstantial evidence, and isn’t willing to look any further. Especially not at the dead man’s girlfriend, who he secretly swore to protect and look out for years before.
When a private detective is hired to actually look into to case, by the victim’s mother and the wife of the man in custody (because they both know he’s innocent), Will is asked to help her out, even as it brings him into conflict with his boss. I lost track of how many times Will quits/gets suspended/is fired/quits again.
It all ends in an even bigger mess, with shots fired, a confession, and Will being encouraged to run for Sheriff over the corrupt and frankly hopeless incumbent.
Will feels he’s failed his friends, and while he remains in the town, at his family’s old farm, he’s still haunted by his demons and ghosts, which may well be the death of him.
Many of the characters are deeply conflicted and held back by the past, to the point where the wrong person is arrested and could be charged with murder in a state with the death penalty. Those old wounds linger and make people commit terrible mistakes. The Sheriff doesn’t come out of any of this well, holding what he thinks he knows over people to control them. Will is broken by his losses and what he perceives as his failures, unable to see another way. This isn’t a happy book, but it is certainly an interesting one.

*I was kindly gifted a copy of this book in exchange for taking part in this blog tour, but all opinions remain my own.