Jon Hickey: Big Chief

There seems to be a run on books about fixers these days. Or maybe it’s just what comes my way and what I decide to read.

As I’m a but under the weather today, I’m sharing the Kirkus Review on this book. It’s a well considered review and billed as: “”A fixer for a Native American tribal leader is caught in the drama of a tense election season.”

“Mitch Caddo, the narrator of Hickey’s assured debut, is 30 years old and introduces himself as “the youngest ever tribal operations director for the Passage Rouge Nation of Lake Superior Anishinaabe,” a Wisconsin tribe with 5,000 enrolled members. It’s a step up from his previous work as a tribal attorney working family-court cases.

But as the election for tribal president approaches, he’s torn: He knows that his old friend Mack Beck, the current president, who’s taken up residence in a suite at the local casino hotel, is an incompetent boor, and that Mack’s main political strategy—banishing and disenrolling those who fall into legal trouble and effectively paying off the tribe via annual checks from the general fund—at once weakens and alienates the community.

As Mitch does disreputable things on Mack’s behalf, such as creating burner Facebook accounts smearing his opponent, Mitch is prompted to reconsider his past. Joe Beck, who’s the tribal counsel, Mack’s adoptive father, and a mentor to Mitch after his mother’s death, is disappointed in the mudslinging. Mack’s sister, Layla, with whom Mitch had a brief fling, is even more resentful.

Keeping the timeframe tight—the story runs from Thanksgiving to the election the following Tuesday—escalates the intensity of a story that includes a plane crash, a community riot, hovering FBI agents, and a police department that’s much too comfortable using military surplus equipment. But most of the tension resides within Mitch, who enters the story with plenty of swagger—“I execute the decisions of a multi-million-dollar corporation that also happens to be a sovereign nation”—while slowly recognizing the perils of his braggadocio.

It’s not hard to see the events in this small community as an allegory for larger themes of corruption in the Trump era, but Hickey avoids big symphonic flourishes and instead emphasizes the cost to individuals. A big-minded book about small-town politics.”

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6 responses to “Jon Hickey: Big Chief”

  1. Americaoncoffee Avatar

    Another awesome review. ☕️☕️❤️Well wishes, June.

    1. June Lorraine Roberts Avatar

      Thanks so much 🙂

  2. Gypsy Bev Avatar

    Sometimes a little different is refreshing.

  3. Americaoncoffee Avatar
    Americaoncoffee

    The allegoric realities here are profound.

  4. Margot Kinberg Avatar

    I hope you feel better soon, June. In the meantime, thanks for sharing this review. It sounds like an intriguing thriller, and I do like the idea of a story that takes place with Native American communities.

    1. June Lorraine Roberts Avatar

      It’s a little different Margot, and I mean that in a good way.

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