cover image Into That Good Night

Into That Good Night

Levis Keltner. Arcade, $24.99 (336p) ISBN 978-1-62872-844-6

In Keltner’s disappointing debut, the cancer diagnosis of high school sports hero John Walker rattles the Chicago suburb of Palos Hills. Doug Horolez, an unsympathetic non-jock, dubs his classmate “Dead John Walker,” a nickname picked up by other callous students. The community’s malaise is somehow dissipated by the murder of sixth-grader Erika Summerson, who’s stabbed to death in the woods outside Palos Hills. Doug, who has a crush on Erika’s older sister, ends up joining a group of his schoolmates, including John, in investigating the crime. But Keltner fails to explain how the amateur murder probe allows the residents of Palos Hills to recover from the trauma of Walker’s cancer diagnosis, especially given the investigation’s ugly revelations. Readers should be prepared for some clunky prose (Doug “buried his nose between the pages and inhaled until his lungs were hard balloons full of the shared experience of this object the girl had cherished”). As a coming-of-age novel, it also falls short, given the dullness of Doug’s adolescent struggles. There’s very little to recommend here. (June)