Some books are easy, reassuring reads: They offer self-improvement tips, reinforce our preconceptions or make even the most complicated matters seem simple. Alex Mar’s Seventy Times Seven: A True Story of Murder and Mercy is the opposite kind of book. It’s urgent, messy and unsettling. It isn’t a page-turner, exactly: It’s long and sprawling. But it’s a troubling, haunting read. You may not find yourself staying up late to finish it, but odds are, you’ll find yourself lying awake in the small hours, turning it over and over in your mind ... Seventy Times Seven tells multiple intertwined tales: There’s the tale of Paula’s crime and punishment; the tale of Ruth Pelke and her family; the tale of Gary’s boom-and-bust economy and its troubled racial politics ... More than anything, Seventy Times Seven is a book about the promise and limits of empathy ... Occasionally frustrating. Mar, a documentary filmmaker and former editor at Rolling Stone, has far too many stories to tell, and a more ruthless editor might have pushed her to eliminate several minor characters and trim some extraneous detail ... But these are minor flaws and don’t detract from the sheer power of the central stories. Seventy Times Seven gives readers an unflinching glimpse into brutality, pain, loneliness, rage and revenge, and asks if regret, compassion, mercy and forgiveness can be enough to bridge the gulfs of race, class and ideology that so often divide us. “Seventy Times Seven” is full of questions and painful ambiguities — and Mar is courageous enough to leave most of her questions unanswered.
Read Full Review >>