cover image Harbor Lights

Harbor Lights

James Lee Burke. Atlantic Monthly, $27 (368p) ISBN 978-0-8021-6096-6

Burke (Every Cloak Rolled in Blood), best-known for his Edgar-winning Dave Robicheaux mystery series, proves his versatility as a storyteller in this textured collection. The title story revolves around James Broussard, a middle-aged oil and gas engineer in 1942 Louisiana who remains traumatized by his combat duty in WWI France. When Broussard and his young son, Aaron, witness a capsized tanker burning in the Gulf of Mexico, he reports the calamity anonymously without explaining why to Aaron. Later, at a restaurant, two federal agents attempt to intimidate Broussard into keeping silent about the tanker. Instead, he pokes a hornet’s nest by telling the local newspaper. In “The Assault,” a history professor is outraged after police refuse to investigate his daughter’s beating at a bar, which happened while she was drunk. He takes matters into his own hands, and ends up facing a difficult moral choice. Throughout, Burke manages to conjure his characters’ worldview in a few artful brushstrokes (Aaron in the title story dreams about “harbor lights that offer sanctuary from a world that breaks everything in us that is beautiful and good”). These impressive stories establish that Burke doesn’t need a whodunit plot to catch a reader’s attention. Agent: Anne-Lise Spitzer, Philip G. Spitzer Literary. (Jan.)