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‘Blackwater Falls’ is a whodunit that goes below the surface

Well into Ausma Zehanat Khan’s new novel, “Blackwater Falls,” police Detective Inaya Rahman and her partner Catalina “Cat” Hernandez confront a motorcycle gang threatening an immigrant family’s home. The scene is taut; violence looms. Yet a mixture of smart questions, calm resistance, and help from a surprising source eases the standoff.

It’s a compelling moment that reflects the tone and time of Khan’s gripping story. The setting is the present; the place is a mountain burg called Blackwater Falls, Colorado, where an influx of newcomers from the Middle East and Africa stake their claim within the largely white, but diversifying, community. In the town’s wealthy enclaves and picturesque downtown, cultures mix and often miss, emotions blaze hot, and assumptions run rampant. How welcome, then, to have Khan at the narrative rudder. A practiced mystery writer, as well as the former editor-in-chief of Muslim Girl magazine, she delivers a top-notch page turner that navigates the complex identities, conflicting allegiances, and shifting traditions of our modern world.

Inaya, a member of the Community Response Unit of the Denver Police Department, is a principled investigator in love with her job despite a traumatic incident early in her career. She’s also a devout Muslim, nearly 30, and the eldest of three girls who remains, much to her devoted parents’ distress, unmarried.

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