A sadly relevant look at the consequences of racism and bigotry.
Esa Khattak and his partner, Sgt. Rachel Getty, are the
mainstays of Canada’s Community Policing Department, which deals with hate
crimes and terrorism. Their latest case takes them from their Toronto base to a
small Quebecois town where someone has just massacred members of the local
mosque. Both Rachel and Esa, who is a second-generation Canadian Muslim, are
deeply disturbed when they receive a hostile reception from Christian Lemaire,
the officer in charge. Prejudice is clearly at work when local priest Father
Roy, who was found at the scene with a rifle in his hands, is escorted away,
while Amadou Duchon, a young black member of the mosque, is arrested. Scores of
reporters, community activists, and the premier’s press liaison descend on the
town with their very different agendas. The crimes seem almost to have been committed
by two different people. The women were all calmly shot with a handgun in the
basement; a violent rage upstairs apparently fueled the deaths and woundings of
dozens of men with an assault rifle. Esa, who always gets intensely invested in
his cases, becomes even more so because of the involvement of university
student Alizah Siddiqui, whose sister’s murder he investigated (A Dangerous
Crossing, 2018). Alizah has a campus radio talk show that constantly
battles another station intent on stirring up hatred in an area where
Francophile sentiment already runs deep. The neo-Nazi Wolf Allegiance is run by
Maxime Thibault, an arrogant preppy who has a love-hate relationship with
Alizah. Rachel is both attracted to Lemaire and deeply distrustful of him and
other police officers she suspects of bigotry. Khan peoples her police
procedural with believably nuanced characters to highlight the consequences of
hate.
The tension never lets down in this horrifying look at mass
murder and the often mundane factors that inspire it.

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