While I agree with some comments that Bruce Borgos’ debut novel, The Bitter Past, is reminiscent of Craig Johnson’s Longmire books, it also brings back memories of Betty Webb’s 2012 Lena Jones mystery, Desert Wind. With two timelines, a mystery and espionage combined in one book, The Bitter Past is a fascinating, unusual debut.

Sheriff Porter Beck is a former Foreign Area Officer in the Army. Now, he’s sheriff of Lincoln County, Nevada, a county the size of Maryland. Despite the vast territory to cover, Beck knows most of the residents. His father was once the sheriff in the county before he developed dementia. Beck recognizes the dead man, a retired FBI agent. Ralph Atterbury was seventy-four. Beck never saw anyone who suffered that level of torture. It was worse than the Taliban. With Beck’s Army background, though, he has suspicions. When Sana Locke, an FBI agent from Washington shows up and wants to see Beck’s crime scene, he’s even more suspicious.

In the 1950s, and for decades afterwards, Nevada was the site for nuclear testing. In the ’50s, a KGB agent, found a way to infiltrate the site, under the name Freddie Meyer. Meyer’s assignment wasn’t just to infiltrate the site. He was part of a larger plan.

Now, over sixty years later, someone is in Nevada, looking for that former KGB agent. Atterbury might have had files that would help identify a man who would now be in his eighties. So, Atterbury was tortured for the information. It’s up to Sheriff Beck and his small team to protect that man, although they have no clue as to his current identity.

The Bitter Past is a gripping story that combines elements of mystery, espionage, and history. Beck wonders if he himself suffers from effects of the radiation from those nuclear tests. His mother, and so many other people who lived there in the 1950s, died of cancer. Animals suffered cruel deaths after the tests. But, during the 1950s, Americans believed the need to beat the Soviets in the nuclear arms race and the Cold War. While Borgos tells a riveting story, he doesn’t neglect the effects of the 1950s tests.

The Bitter Past is an unusual novel. Kudos to the author for a compelling debut.

Bruce Borgos’ website is https://www.bruceborgos.com/

The Bitter Past by Bruce Borgos. Minotaur, 2023. ISBN 9781250848079 (hardcover), 320p.


FTC Full Disclosure – I read a galley supplied by NetGalley so I could review the book for a journal.