Anna Bailey’s sophomore novel, Our Last Wild Days, arrives like a humid Louisiana breeze—thick with atmosphere, heavy with secrets, and impossible to ignore. Following her Sunday Times bestselling debut Where the Truth Lies, Bailey trades the Colorado Rockies for the murky bayous of rural Louisiana, crafting a Southern Gothic mystery that feels both achingly familiar and startlingly fresh. This is a story where the landscape itself becomes a character, where family loyalty runs as deep and dark as the swamp water, and where the past refuses to stay buried.
Set in the fictional town of Jacknife, Louisiana, the novel follows Loyal May, a journalist who returns home to care for her declining mother, only to discover that her estranged childhood friend Cutter Labasque has been found dead in the local bayou. What begins as a simple case of apparent suicide quickly unravels into something far more sinister, pulling Loyal into a web of corruption, violence, and long-buried guilt.
The Architecture of Atmosphere: Setting as Soul
Bailey’s greatest triumph in Our Last Wild Days is her masterful rendering of place. The Louisiana bayou isn’t merely a backdrop—it’s a living, breathing entity that pulses through every page. The author’s prose drips with the same humidity that clings to her characters’ skin, creating an atmosphere so thick you can practically taste the Spanish moss and chemical runoff.
The fictional town of Jacknife emerges as a character in its own right, complete with its own moral geography. There’s the respectable side of town where people attend Our Lady of the Divine Water church and pretend not to see the growing poverty around them, and then there’s the swamp where the Labasques eke out their existence hunting alligators and being whispered about by “decent” folks. Bailey captures the claustrophobic nature of small-town life with surgical precision, where everyone knows everyone’s business but nobody talks about what really matters.
The environmental degradation serves as both literal backdrop and metaphor throughout the novel. The poisoned waterways, the chemical stench from the plastics plant, and the sinking land all mirror the moral rot eating away at the community. It’s environmental horror married to social commentary, and Bailey handles both with equal skill.
Characters Carved from Cypress and Circumstance
Loyal May: The Weight of Returning
Loyal May stands as one of the most compelling protagonists to emerge from recent Southern Gothic fiction. A successful journalist in Houston, she returns to care for her mother who’s showing signs of early-onset dementia, only to find herself confronting the guilt that’s haunted her for a decade. Bailey crafts Loyal as neither hero nor victim, but as a deeply flawed woman trying to make amends for past mistakes.
The author excels at depicting Loyal’s internal struggle between her journalistic instincts and her personal investment in the case. Her guilt over writing a devastating article about the Labasque family years earlier drives much of the narrative tension, and Bailey never lets her off the hook easily. Loyal’s journey toward redemption feels earned rather than given, making her ultimate confrontation with the truth all the more powerful.
The Labasque Legacy: Gothic Family Dynamics
The Labasque family represents Bailey’s most ambitious character work. Each sibling—the deceased Cutter, the volatile Dewall, and the addiction-ravaged Beau—embodies different responses to generational trauma and societal rejection. Cutter emerges posthumously as a fierce, complicated young woman whose wildness masked deep vulnerability. Dewall, with his scarred face and violent reputation, could have been a simple villain, but Bailey reveals layers of protective instinct and unexpected tenderness beneath his brutality.
Perhaps most heartbreaking is Beau, whose methamphetamine addiction serves as both personal tragedy and social commentary. Bailey doesn’t romanticize addiction or offer easy solutions, instead showing how desperation makes people complicit in their own destruction.
Supporting Cast: Texture and Truth
The secondary characters feel fully realized rather than functional. Sasha Petitpas, the pink-haired journalist who becomes Loyal’s partner in investigation, brings both humor and pathos to the story. His queerness in rural Louisiana is handled with nuance—neither ignored nor over-emphasized, but woven naturally into the fabric of who he is and how he moves through the world.
Chuck De Foret, the veteran newspaper editor struggling with alcoholism, and Rosa May, Loyal’s mother disappearing into dementia, add emotional weight and generational perspective to the narrative. Even minor characters like the Winter girls or the faith healer Marjorie Black feel distinct and purposeful.
The Machinery of Mystery: Plot and Pacing
Bailey structures her mystery with the patience of a true Southern storyteller. The plot unfolds like layers of sediment in the bayou—slowly, naturally, with each revelation feeling both surprising and inevitable. The author resists the temptation to rush toward resolution, instead allowing tension to build organically through character interaction and atmospheric detail.
The mystery itself works on multiple levels. On the surface, it’s a whodunit about Cutter’s death, but deeper investigations reveal corruption in the sheriff’s department, connections to white supremacist drug dealers, and the various ways people can be destroyed by circumstances beyond their control. Bailey weaves these threads together skillfully, though occasionally the plot becomes dense with competing storylines.
Strengths in Structure
Multi-layered investigation: The mystery deepens naturally as Loyal uncovers different aspects of corruption
Character-driven pacing: Events unfold based on character decisions rather than arbitrary plot requirements
Authentic procedural elements: The journalism aspects feel researched and realistic
Areas for Improvement
Subplot density: Some secondary mysteries (like the missing Marcie Bordelon) occasionally feel underdeveloped
Resolution timing: The climactic confrontation, while dramatically satisfying, comes somewhat abruptly after careful buildup
Language as Landscape: Bailey’s Prose Style
Bailey’s writing in Our Last Wild Days shows significant evolution from her debut. Her prose has gained confidence and regional authenticity, capturing the rhythms of Louisiana speech without resorting to cartoonish dialect. She has a poet’s eye for detail and a journalist’s ear for dialogue, creating language that feels both literary and accessible.
The author excels at sensory writing, making readers feel the oppressive heat, smell the chemical-tinged air, and hear the night sounds of the swamp. Her metaphors arise naturally from the environment—characters don’t just feel trapped, they feel “like gators swallowing hooks,” and secrets don’t just surface, they “float up like something dead.”
However, Bailey sometimes indulges in purple prose that, while beautiful, can slow narrative momentum. Certain descriptive passages, particularly in the novel’s first half, feel slightly overwrought when speed and clarity might serve the story better.
Social Commentary: More Than Murder in the Bayou
Our Last Wild Days succeeds as both entertainment and social commentary, addressing issues of poverty, environmental destruction, police corruption, and the opioid crisis without becoming preachy. Bailey understands that the best social criticism emerges from character and situation rather than authorial lecturing.
The novel’s treatment of class dynamics feels particularly sharp. The way the “respectable” citizens of Jacknife view the Labasques—as both essential (for their alligator meat) and disposable (when convenient)—reflects broader American attitudes toward the rural poor. Bailey shows how economic desperation makes people vulnerable to exploitation, whether by corrupt law enforcement or white supremacist drug dealers.
The environmental themes resonate without overwhelming the mystery plot. The poisoned waterways and cancer-causing chemical plants provide both literal danger and metaphorical weight, suggesting that communities that allow their environment to be destroyed will inevitably face moral corruption as well.
Comparative Context: Southern Gothic Traditions
Our Last Wild Days stands confidently alongside recent Southern Gothic mysteries like Tana French’s Dublin Murder Squad series or Gillian Flynn’s Sharp Objects. Like the best works in this tradition, Bailey’s novel uses crime as a lens to examine broader social pathologies while maintaining genuine sympathy for characters trapped by circumstances.
Our Last Wild Days shares DNA with classic Southern Gothic works—the grotesque family dynamics echo Flannery O’Connor, while the atmospheric corruption recalls James Lee Burke’s Dave Robicheaux novels. However, Bailey brings a contemporary feminist perspective that feels fresh rather than derivative.
Compared to her debut Where the Truth Lies, this novel shows growth in character development and atmospheric writing, though it occasionally lacks the tight focus that made her first book so compelling.
Final Verdict: A Worthy Successor
Our Last Wild Days confirms Anna Bailey as a significant voice in contemporary mystery fiction. While not perfect—the plot occasionally buckles under the weight of its ambitions, and some atmospheric passages could be trimmed—this is a deeply satisfying novel that works on multiple levels. Bailey has created a world that feels authentically lived-in, characters that linger in memory, and a mystery that satisfies both intellectually and emotionally.
It’s an accomplished work that will appeal to fans of atmospheric mysteries, Southern Gothic fiction, and socially conscious crime novels. Bailey’s evocation of place rivals the best regional mystery writers, and her understanding of how personal trauma intersects with social problems marks her as a writer with serious literary aspirations.
For readers who appreciate mysteries that prioritize character over plot mechanics, atmosphere over action, and social insight over simple puzzle-solving, Our Last Wild Days delivers richly. It’s a novel that trusts its readers’ intelligence while never forgetting to entertain—a balance that’s harder to achieve than Bailey makes it look.