Don't forget me, little Bessie A novel

James Lee Burke, 1936-

Book - 2025

"Bestselling author James Lee Burke tells his most thrilling and insightful story yet through the eyes of fourteen-year-old Bessie Holland. At the beginning of the twentieth century, as America grapples with forces of human and natural violence more powerful than humanity has ever seen, Bessie Holland yearns for the love that she has never known. She finds a soulmate and mentor in a brilliant but tormented suffragette English teacher, who inspires Bessie to fight the forces of evil that permeate her world. Watching the vast Texas countryside being destroyed by an oil company and a menacing figure with a violent past, Bessie is prepared to defend her home and her family. But when she accidentally kills an unarmed man to defend her fathe...r Hackberry, she must flee to New York. There, her older brother introduces her to boys who will grow into gangsters, but as children admire and respect Bessie's spirit and fortitude as she is cast into a gangland that yearns for justice and mercy. A welcome return to the beloved Holland series and populated with characters both radiant and despicable, Don't Forget Me, Little Bessie is an epic story of a remarkable young girl who fights against potentially overwhelming forces"--

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Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The kaleidoscopic fifth installment in MWA Grand Master Burke's Holland Family saga (after Every Cloak Rolled in Blood) follows 14-year-old Bessie Mae Holland as she navigates threats to her family in WWI-era Texas. The action kicks off with Betsy's brother, Cody, losing an eye during a dispute with local bully Jubal Fowler. Betsy and Cody's father, former Texas Ranger Hackberry Holland, struggles to suppress his violent instincts while confronting Jubal's father, Winthrop, but Bessie shoots Winthrop, wounding him, and ends up in jail. A friendly drifter tampers with evidence to get Bessie released, and Cody flees to New York City, where he's sucked into the criminal underworld. Meanwhile, Indian Charlie, an unscrupulous security guard for the Atlas Oil Company, seeks revenge against Hackberry for an old criminal case, putting Bessie--who longs to join her brother in New York--in harm's way. Vivid, atmospheric prose ("The grit so dense it could knock a squirrel out of a tree, the dust so high the sun was a pink wafer") enhances Burke's wrenching portrayal of Betsy's hope for a better life. This is another winner from a crime writer at the top of his game. Agent: Anne-Lise Spitzer, Philip Spitzer Literary. (June)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

The latest chapter in the saga of the Holland family focuses on a most unlikely member: Hackberry Holland's daughter, Bessie Mae, a child born with the 20th century. Bessie has a haint. She sees spirits and sees herself as indissolubly connected to a little girl who was murdered years ago and whose stolen life she's determined to lead. Her tale begins in 1914 with her first encounter with Slick, a spirit who offers her a dramatically different perspective on the world from her alcoholic father, a Texas Ranger-turned-rancher, and her older brother, Cody. Although Bessie bonds with her teacher Ida Banks, this is no mere coming-of-age story. Repeatedly abused and dismissed by the threatening men who surround her--from Winthrop Fowler, the father of her schoolmate Jubal, to Indian Charlie, a killer who works security for Atlas Oil, to Tater Dog, a particularly vile member of Charlie's gang--she's just as proactive, outspoken, and capable from the opening as any of Burke's gallery of male heroes. As speculators scramble to extract every drop of oil they can from beneath the Texas soil, Bessie shoots an unarmed but eminently deserving man to death and runs away to New York, where Cody's taken up with the Bowery kids Meyer Lansky, Benny Siegel, and Owney Madden. But even the men there who won't turn into gangsters are no better than the men Bessie left behind, and she returns to Texas determined to protect the father who can no longer protect her. A special treat for all the readers who've longed to see Burke place one of his strong women at the center of a story. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.