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Fiction. Mystery. HTML: Edie Kiglatuk's discovery along Alaska's Iditarod Trail leads to a massive, far-reaching conspiracy. M. J. McGrath's debut novel, White Heat, earned both fans and favorable comparisons to bestselling Scandinavian thrillers such as Smilla's Sense of Snow and the Kurt Wallander series. In The Boy in the Snow, half-Inuit Edie Kiglatuk finds herself in Alaska with Sergeant Derek Palliser, helping her ex-husband Sammy in his bid to win the famous Iditarod dogsled race. The race takes a grim turn when Edie stumbles upon the body of a baby left out in the forest. The state troopers are keen to pin the death on the Dark Believersâ??a sinister offshoot of a Russian Orthodox sectâ??but Edie's instincts tell her otherwise. Her investigations take her into a world of corrupt politics, religious intolerance, greed, and sex trafficking. But just as she begins to get some answers, Edie finds herself confronted by a painful secret from her past… (more)
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The local Anchorage police force are convinced that this is the work of a breakaway Russian sect called the "Dark Believers", but no one is entirely sure whether such a group actually exists. Edie being Edie, and despite the protests of her friends, one of whom is a police officer from Ellesmere Island himself, she carries on undaunted in her search for the truth. The police think they've found their man, but then another baby's body is discovered in the same circumstances. This one has Down Syndrome.
Set amid the cold, arctic backdrop of Alaska where a famous dog sled race is underway.....Edie's ex husband Sammy is one of the participants...I found this a fast paced and atmospheric read. There is also a political angle due to a Mayoral race also taking place and, as so often happens in politics, the candidates are up to their necks in sleaze and false promises.
All the characters are well drawn and Edie herself is just wonderful. If only all human beings had her empathy and integrity, the world would be a better place.
This is the second in a series, but (having not read the first one) I didn't find this detracted from the enjoyment of the book.
In summary, an unusual and well written, exciting read which tells us a lot about the evil way people can behave.
Edie is a wonderfully unique protagonist. She is half Inuit, half white and makes her home on remote Ellesmere Island, Nunavut, working as a
Edie is canny, intuitive, dogged, determined and just a really engaging and different character. McGrath has chosen unique settings and backgrounds as well. McGrath has written non fiction on the displacement of Canadian Inuit. Her fiction narrative carries detail and descriptions that utilize that knowledge very effectively. Customs, culture and language and the landscape all play an important role in McGrath's story.
The plotting of the mystery in The Boy in the Snow is excellent as well - corrupt politicians, age old religious sects and more. But, this is truly a character driven series - one I will be adding to my must read list.
I chose to listen to this book. Now the reader was Kate Reading - not one of my favorites as I dislike her habit of drawing out her words. (She just narrated Cornwell's The Bone Bed) But it didn't bother me as much this time - I think because I was quite engrossed in both the story and the characters.
I love stories about private investigators, and although Edie isn't actually a PI or officially employed as an investigator, she fits well into this part of the genre. She is a bit spiky, brave to the point of being foolhardy, fiercely independent, and committed to finding out the truth however inconvenient that might be. She also comes with a lot of personal history and has had alcohol problems in the past. None of this is particularly unusual in the genre. I really enjoyed reading about her in this book though.
I was intrigued by the author's efforts to imagine how Alaska would look to someone from an even colder, wilder, more northern place, somewhere which hasn't been absorbed as another of the United States - although Edie's Arctic home is officially part of Canada, it really is another place and culture.
White Heat, the first book in the series, didn't quite live up to my expectations, but I thought this book was much better, and I am looking forward to The Bone Seeker.
McGrath gives you a real feel for Alaska with both traditional and modern life. You get a sense of intimate knowledge of the characters in a way that strengthens the story. She weaves a detailed patchwork of a story.
I did get a bit confused at one point with the people and their links to each other, but that is probably due to my memory problems!
Great read, make sure you read White Heat first.
She battles to find Reindeer sausages, and is shocked to be called an ‘Eskimo’ but worse is to come when she
This is the second book to feature Edie and it maintains the standard set by the first: details of the famous Alaskan sled race are fascinating as are the political shenanigans, the food, and the mind set of the Great North.
Thank you NetGalley for the opportunity to review this book.
McGrath gives you a real feel for Alaska with both traditional and modern life. You get a sense of intimate knowledge of the characters in a way that strengthens the story. She weaves a detailed patchwork of a story.
I did get a bit confused at one point with the people and their links to each other, but that is probably due to my memory problems!
Great read, make sure you read White Heat first.
McGrath gives you a real feel for Alaska with both traditional and modern life. You get a sense of intimate knowledge of the characters in a way that strengthens the story. She weaves a detailed patchwork of a story.
I did get a bit confused at one point with the people and their links to each other, but that is probably due to my memory problems!
Great read, make sure you read White Heat first.
McGrath gives you a real feel for Alaska with both traditional and modern life. You get a sense of intimate knowledge of the characters in a way that strengthens the story. She weaves a detailed patchwork of a story.
I did get a bit confused at one point with the people and their links to each other, but that is probably due to my memory problems!
Great read, make sure you read White Heat first.
McGrath gives you a real feel for Alaska with both traditional and modern life. You get a sense of intimate knowledge of the characters in a way that strengthens the story. She weaves a detailed patchwork of a story.
I did get a bit confused at one point with the people and their links to each other, but that is probably due to my memory problems!
Great read, make sure you read White Heat first.
I was rather sad that the book has more to do with politics and greed than it does the Iditarod, but that's the way this story panned out, and I adjusted well. McGrath shows that Alaska still has ties to Russia (something that I hadn't thought of but should have), and if anything there were a few too many bad guys roaming around. I almost needed a scorecard.
Having read the first book in this series, White Heat, as well as a short story, I found that I had the most difficulty with Edie herself. I don't remember her being quite so ill-tempered and combative. Of course, her behavior undoubtedly has a lot to do with those demons from her past, the dead baby, and her dislike of Alaska. Edie is used to getting from place to place on foot, with a dogsled, or possibly on a snowmobile, but here she has to drive cars and trucks. This isn't a good mix for woman nor machine. As someone with her says, "Edie doesn't drive. She bulldozes." And that's how Edie investigates, too. She doesn't pay attention to the good advice her friends give her; friends who'd help her more if she let them. All in all, Edie is her own worst enemy here, and I'm hoping that she's on a more even keel in the third book.
The middle section was well done - Edie's reasoning for investigating the death goes with her tenacious personality and want of Justice. The twists and turns were a bit unexpected, and it kept me guessing. But the end of the story, after the mystery was solved, was tacked on and unnecessary. Also, everyone survived, including the dogs, which seemed a bit ... out of character for the story.
The setting of the story was well done - showing the difference between living in the far arctic vs Alaska - the cold, the dangers of living in a place where you will die in a very short time if you don't wear the proper clothes.
This is really a 3.25 book, but since it kept me reading, I've rounded the rating up to A 3.5.
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