by Eric Wright ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 1, 2001
Like Buried in Stone (1996), a bare-boned plot with cozy overtones, animated by the tetchy Pickett-Charlotte relationship.
Wry, retired Toronto copper Mel Pickett, a widower, and his new wife Charlotte can’t quite decide which house to give up—his, hers, or the cabin he built himself on some nondescript land on the Larch River. When a dead body is found face down on the cabin floor, Wilkie and Copps of the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) fear it might be Pickett, but it turns out to be Norbert Thompson, living (and now dying) there rent-free in exchange for caretaking duties. Did Aaron and Ruth Sproat, Norbert’s sister-in-law and her new husband, kill him rather than share his late brother’s chicken-farming profits with him? Perhaps, though Pickett thinks it more likely that he himself was the intended victim of some vengeful crook he had put away. But which one? Trading on an official OPP status he no longer has, Pickett interviews suspects and witnesses, riling more than a few, while sidestepping his nagging sister-in-law Verna, who’s busy fretting over Eliza, a writer who weekends in a trailer on his property, and wondering what to tell George Colwood, who thinks he’s Pickett’s son, the result of a love-her/leave-her wartime encounter. A hospital stakeout will go awry and the cabin will be torched before Pickett shoos the pious Sproats to their minister for counseling, watches Wilkie and Copps waylay the perp in an otter pond, and invites the granddaughter of his heart, no blood relation, home to meet Charlotte.
Like Buried in Stone (1996), a bare-boned plot with cozy overtones, animated by the tetchy Pickett-Charlotte relationship.Pub Date: March 1, 2001
ISBN: 0-312-26876-9
Page Count: 208
Publisher: Dunne/Minotaur
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 15, 2000
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by Dennis Lehane ‧ RELEASE DATE: Jan. 30, 2001
An undisciplined but powerfully lacerating story, by an author who knows every block of the neighborhood and every hair on...
After five adventures for Boston shamus Patrick Kenzie and his off-again lover Angela Gennaro (Prayers for Rain, 1999, etc.), Lehane tries his hand at a crossover novel that’s as dark as any of Patrick’s cases.
Even the 1975 prologue is bleak. Sean Devine and Jimmy Marcus are playing, or fighting, outside Sean’s parents’ house in the Point neighborhood of East Buckingham when a car pulls up, one of the two men inside flashes a badge, and Sean and Jimmy’s friend Dave Boyle gets bundled inside, allegedly to be driven home to his mother for a scolding but actually to get kidnapped. Though Dave escapes after a few days, he never really outlives his ordeal, and 25 years later it’s Jimmy’s turn to join him in hell when his daughter Katie is shot and beaten to death in the wilds of Pen Park, and State Trooper Sean, just returned from suspension, gets assigned to the case. Sean knows that both Dave and Jimmy have been in more than their share of trouble in the past. And he’s got an especially close eye on Jimmy, whose marriage brought him close to the aptly named Savage family and who’s done hard time for robbery. It would be just like Jimmy, Sean knows, to ignore his friend’s official efforts and go after the killer himself. But Sean would be a lot more worried if he knew what Dave’s wife Celeste knows: that hours after catching sight of Katie in the last bar she visited on the night of her death, Dave staggered home covered with somebody else’s blood. Burrowing deep into his three sorry heroes and the hundred ties that bind them unbearably close, Lehane weaves such a spellbinding tale that it’s easy to overlook the ramshackle mystery behind it all.
An undisciplined but powerfully lacerating story, by an author who knows every block of the neighborhood and every hair on his characters’ heads.Pub Date: Jan. 30, 2001
ISBN: 0-688-16316-5
Page Count: 416
Publisher: Morrow/HarperCollins
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 15, 2000
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by C.J. Box ‧ RELEASE DATE: July 9, 2001
A high-country Presumed Innocent that moves like greased lightning. First of a welcome new series, though it’s hard to...
Rookie Twelve Sleep County Game Warden Joe Pickett’s not much of a shot, and he’s been looking like a goat ever since poacher Ote Keeley got the drop on him with his own gun during a routine arrest. But at least he’s doing better than Ote, who’s turned up dead on the woodpile outside Joe’s house. Joe’s search in Crazy Woman Creek canyon for the two outfitters and guides Ote was most recently partnered with ends happily, though violently, and suddenly Joe is the man of the hour. Longtime County Sheriff Bud Barnum nervously asks Joe’s assurance that he’s not going to support neighboring game warden Wacey Hedeman’s challenge in the upcoming election; trophy wife Aimee Kensinger, who really likes men in uniforms, invites Joe’s family to housesit her palatial digs for three weeks; and wily Vern Dunnegan, Joe’s predecessor, wants Joe to join him in pulling down big bucks from InterWest resources, the fat-cat corporation for whose gas pipeline Vern’s lining up local support. All this good news is only a front, of course, for a monstrous assault on Joe’s livelihood, his integrity, and his family—and incidentally on an inoffensive species long assumed extinct. In response, Joe promises one of the bad guys that “things are going to get real western,” and that’s exactly what happens in the satisfyingly action-filled climax.
A high-country Presumed Innocent that moves like greased lightning. First of a welcome new series, though it’s hard to imagine tourism-marketing exec Box topping his debut.Pub Date: July 9, 2001
ISBN: 0-399-14748-9
Page Count: 304
Publisher: Putnam
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2001
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