The Witch's Tongue

by James D. Doss

Hardcover, 2004

Status

Available

Call number

F Dos

Call number

F Dos

Barcode

5742

Publication

Minotaur Books (2004), Edition: 1st, 336 pages

Description

Fiction. Mystery. HTML: Strange things are happening near Granite Creek, Colorado, all in the space of less than twenty-four hours. A Ute shaman dreams of being buried alive and hears the hooting of an owl, signaling impending death. A man walks into Spirit Canyon and disappears, leaving his battered wife both relieved and devastated. A private museum is burgled. An Apache is arrested for assaulting a police officer. And a sniper takes a shot through an antique store window, wounding the proprietor. Part-time Ute tribal investigator Charlie Moon would rather be tending to his duties on the Columbine Ranch than playing detective with this puzzling collection of seemingly unrelated events. But when the local police and the FBI-including the beguiling Special Agent Lila McTeague-can't seem to put it all together, Charlie must connect the dots before anyone else dies. In James D. Doss's latest complex and absorbing crime novel set on the Ute reservation in Southern Colorado, Charlie Moon's cleverness and his aunt Daisy Perika's intuition-not to mention the spellbinding story behind this hell of a day-share the limelight with the vibrant details of Native life and custom..… (more)

Original publication date

2004

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User reviews

LibraryThing member lcrouch
Entertaining, but nowhere near Tony Hillerman.
LibraryThing member readerbynight
James Doss does it again. Great fun, good mystery, humorous and believable character interaction and culture. His writing is wonderfully endowed with Ute legend and mysticism. 5 stars from me on this one, I thoroughly enjoyed it..
LibraryThing member jastbrown
Enjoyable series. I think the whole series averages out to a four star review. Less serious than Tony Hillerman, more so than Carl Hiaasen. The locale, as with most of these Southwestern mystery novels, is a real part of the draw! If Daisy Perika's old homestead were real and being offered to me, I
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would be packing my bags instead of pecking away at this computer.

The characters are likeable, the stories interesting (especially the first ten or so) if occasionally a liitle over the top. Mr. Doss includes just a touch of the supernatural, that I usually find attractive. All in all I find the stories wonderfully escapist.. all that I look for in fiction. While not necessary, I would recommend reading the stories in order if possible.
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Rating

(39 ratings; 4)

Pages

336
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