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Summary
Summary
In the tradition of Tony Hillerman and Joseph Wambaugh comes Kirk Mitchell's latest suspense thriller, which reunites Bureau of Indian Affairs Criminal Investigator Emmett Quanah Parker and FBI Special Agent Anna Turnipseed, two Native American cops torn between their heritage and the law.
A fire-gutted police cruiser found in a remote part of the Navajo reservation bears the bodies of a tribal patrolman and his wife. Parker and Turnipseed know a cop's murder is never simple, raising countless questions and suspicions. When another murder is discovered, the case explodes into an otherworldly realm.
Both Parker, a Comanche, and Turnipseed, a Modoc, are well acquainted with the eerie shadow land between native myth and modern homicide investigation. Now they will have to touch minds with a murderer who has woven personal madness with Navajo myth to create his own reality-and with it, the need to kill and kill again.
Reviews (4)
Publisher's Weekly Review
In his second suspense novel featuring unseasoned FBI Special Agent Anna Turnipseed and relentless Bureau of Indian Affairs Investigator Emmett Parker (after Cry Dance), Mitchell pulls out all the stops. Emmett persuades Anna, a fellow Native American, to join him on a case in the Navaho Reservation's Four Corners area. The ritualistic murders of a tribal policeman, Bert Knoki, and his wife, Aurelia, lead the investigators on a serpentine path. As they tear around Arizona, New Mexico and Utah, Anna and Emmett fight their mutual attraction, but their bickering can't disguise the compassion they feel for each other. All Mitchell's complex characters are haunted by the past; the detectives arrive at the solution by first examining Southwestern history, then forcing the truth out of suspects and witnesses. One wonders how Anna and Emmett are able to continue their physically wounding and emotionally grueling work on hardly any sleepÄbut, after all, this is fiction. Comparison with Tony Hillerman is inevitable, due to the locale and Mitchell's Hillermanesque blending of Native American myth and practices with themes that emphasize the hard life of contemporary Indians. But Mitchell's novels are more violent than Hillerman's, his killers more emotionally tortured, his detectives far more damaged in body and soul. Shifting the location of each book should help Mitchell, a powerful writer of deep emotions, breathtaking natural beauty and nail-biting suspense, to step into his own spotlight. (July) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Kirkus Review
A suspense novel that jogs along after Tony Hillerman--and stumbles. Because the higher-ups have decided that a spousal-ed program is good p.r., Navajo cop Hank Knoki has been driving around accompanied by the missus. But when both are found shot to death in their burned-out car, the complexities just keep on coming. Attempting to cope with all of them are Bureau of Indian Affairs investigator Emmett Parker and FBI Special Agent Anna Turnipseed, reunited for their second adventure (Cry Dance, 1999, etc.). He's half-Comanche, she half-Modoc, and together they form a Native American sleuthing pair that with a less hypercomplicated load might have sustained interest. But the plot overwhelms them. Before reaching denouement, it takes Parker-Turnipseed through incest, homosexuality, drug trafficking, squabbling between tribes, squabbling between bureaucrats, squabbling between teenaged gangs, obsession, madness, serial killing, and other staples in the potboiling tradition. Interlarded is the unrelieved sexual tension between the protagonists that has its roots in romantic love. He adores her, she adores him, but the path between them is obligatorily rocky, twisty, hard to negotiate. Several near-death experiences--most suffered by poor Anna--do serve, however, to bring them closer together. By the violent, predictable, and welcome end, the maniacal Gila Monster, a.k.a. Lizard Man, acknowledged god of a Native American gang called the Vipers, is identified and suitably dealt with. Having set the stage for the ritual of "Blood Atonement"--aimed at achieving both justice and revenge--GM is hoist by his own mythic rite. Marshall's a pretty good writer, and if he can take it down a decibel or two--in Hillerman country it's called restraint--good things might develop for this series. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
The bodies of a tribal cop and his wife are found in a burned-out police car on the Navajo reservation in northern New Mexico. BIA investigator Emmett Parker and FBI agent Anna Turnipseed are called to the crime scene. They arrive with plenty of baggage--their developing but troubled relationship; Anna's difficulty in recovering from the trauma she experienced in Cry Dance [BKL F 15 99]--and the case before them opens still more wounds: Emmett, a Cherokee, and Anna, a Modoc, are both believers in rational investigatory technique, but as they track a psychotic killer who imagines himself to be the Gila Monster of Navajo myth, they must confront their own ambivalence about Native American spirituality. Mitchell emphasizes action over police procedure, and he delivers a high-octane thriller in the Thomas Harris mold. Hillerman fans will find this series less subtle than the Leaphorn-Chee novels but more exciting. The climactic scene, in which Parker tracks the Gila Monster across a rugged stretch of the reservation, will leave readers gasping for breath. --Bill Ott
Library Journal Review
As in Cry Dance (LJ 3/1/99), Mitchell once again combines the Indian lore and Southwest landscape of a Tony Hillerman mystery with the gruesome ghoulishness of a Thomas Harris thrillerDnot always successfully. When the bodies of a Navajo patrolman and his wife are discovered in a burned-out police cruiser, Bureau of Indian Affairs Investigator Emmett Parker, a Cherokee, and Anna Turnipseed, his half-Modoc, half-Japanese FBI partner, are called in to investigate, leading them on the trail of a serial killer obsessed with a particular Navajo myth. What they discover in their hunt is a legacy of spirit sicknessDalcoholism, fetal alcohol syndrome, incest, poverty, child abuseDthat results in several more brutal murders. Mitchell, a former law enforcement officer who patrolled reservations in California's Inyo County, knows Native American culture very well and accurately portrays the grim realities of reservation life. But his book bogs down in an overly convoluted plot with too many red herrings, and his switching points of views from Parker and Turnipseed to the killer doesn't always work. For larger mystery collections.DWilda Williams, "Library Journal" (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.