by J.R. Lankford
(8/12/2001)
Bong D. Fabe, Deputy Bureau Chief, The Manila Times Visayas Bureau, Philippines
Jamie Rhines Lankford's third book and first published novel, The Crowning Circle, is a thriller of a friendship and relationship gone sour but saved by the most unexpected and life-threatening circumstance. From its opening tale of death, Ms Lankford has woven a tale of a compassionate, intellectual and mystery thriller that showcases man's inner struggle to find his bearings in a very simple world made complex by the pursuit of happiness.
An explosive original in the caliber only Ms. Lankford could pull off, The Crowning Circle is a story about two very different and great guys--an African-American intuitive forensic psychologist Dr. John "Skeet" Cullum, a Vietnam veteran, and a white American logical inventor-engineer, Jake Morrison, owner and CEO of Solutions, Inc.--whose bond is Aaron Neville's "Down Into Muddy Waters" and their guitars. The two are the most unlikely detectives I've encountered so far. And I'd like to meet them again. Set in the imaginary Ohio town of Chatsford, Skeet and Jake's friendship, as well as Skeet's relationship with Shirley, his girlfriend of seven years who's ostracized by the Vietnamese community for being a "bui doi" (mixed blood being an African-American-Vietnamese), were put to the severest test as Skeet lost his job at the police department for helping Jake helped solve his cases with him.
This unusual mix is what makes this story tick. Its thesis that different culture and social status can indeed work together in love and harmony to solve this world's ills and give happiness where it is needed is explored to the hilt, carried on by compelling prose and unhindered dialogue, building up to an explosive climax that any reader of the thriller genre would be compelled to shout "hurrah!" and clap at the end.
At the center of it all is love. This is primarily a love story so tragic and compelling that it gives the antagonist/murderer a human face and explained why he was driven to kill. All in all, The Crowning Circle is mixed bag of a love story, a murder, a friendship story, a psychological drama, etc. that may be the reason why no publisher had published it, prompting her to self-published it. But isn't human life a big mixed bag? I highly recommend this book to all who love thriller. And I want to meet Skeet, Jake, Shirley and Gabrielle again in the near future. To Jamie, congratulations! Keep pushing that pen.