<p>Mark L. Brooks hits a homer with this first novel if you love family dynamics how each member plays on each other with the good the bad the <em>most </em>ugly and how they can arrive victorious.&nbsp;<em>Laying Autumn's Dust </em>is a novel told in three first-person voices.&nbsp;Donny the father-you can feel sorry for him at first-is a man repressed with a low moral compass who can't seem to rise above his worst instincts and doesn't seem to care.&nbsp;He spreads his wounding to wife Abigail who isn't perfect but gives an unfortunate life her best shot.&nbsp;As for son Jesse-how much of Donny will affect him and how much will Abigail's soft resonance of strength steel him?</p><p><br></p><p>As the family grows and changes you see each developing autonomy as the only answer when Donny's shortcomings become a wedge.&nbsp;More like a backdrop for these highly dimensional characters the plot features murder suicide mystery and vengeance as well as love hope and charity.</p><p><br></p><p>The pace is southern like an evening breeze gently moving Spanish moss on an oak tree in Low Country.&nbsp;Brooks isn't forcing readers to move too fast.&nbsp;But upon reaching the end readers will feel part of this family and akin to the idea that Brooks is looking into us all.</p><p>Also at play is Brooks' gift for one-liners: So I sat and watched the leaves fall in the yard and float across the field-and I realized death come in all colors. </p>