Trespasser
Mike Bowditch Mystery Series, Book 2
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- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
April 11, 2011
In Doiron's compelling sequel to his debut, The Poacher's Son, troubled 25-year-old Mike Bowditch, a Maine game warden, is still coming to grips with the realization that his estranged fatherânow deceasedâhas become known as the state's most notorious murderer. Bowditch finds solace in his job, but when he investigates a car accident involving a deer on a remote stretch of road, the driver, 23-year-old Ashley Kim, from Cambridge, Mass., has disappeared. Later, in an empty house, he finds Kim's naked body, bound with sailor's rigging tape, with the word slut carved into her chest. As Bowditch becomes increasingly obsessed with finding the killer, he puts his already tenuous career in jeopardy as well as his equally tenuous relationship with his possibly pregnant girlfriend. Doiron complements this thriller's decidedly dark tone with introspective existential and spiritual musings and atmospheric imagery (houses in a fishing village "clung like barnacles" around a harbor). 15-city author tour.
April 15, 2011
Seven years after a trial sent a police suspect up for murder, a disturbingly similar new killing reopens the case, dragging Maine game warden Mike Bowditch along for one hellacious ride.
Mike's nightmare begins with a call so routine he can't even respond to it. A passerby has phoned to say that a young woman's car has struck a deer out on Parker Point. Already busy responding to Hank Varnum's complaint that some lowlife on an all-terrain vehicle has vandalized his property, Mike passes on the call, but when Trooper Curt Hutchins has engine trouble, he ends up driving to the scene an hour later, only to find that both the deer and the driver have vanished. Sadly, it's not long before Mike finds the driver, Harvard Business School student Ashley Kim, raped and murdered in the Parker Point vacation home of her teacher, Prof. Hans Westergaard. Both before and after Mike contaminates it, everything about the crime scene reminds him of the seven-year-old murder of college student/waitress Nikki Donnatelli. And he's not the only one. Lou Bates, whose charismatic nephew Erland Jefferts was convicted of the earlier crime, is convinced that Mike can help clear him. Jill Westergaard is equally insistent that Mike can help find her missing husband. Since game wardens, especially if they've found dead bodies, aren't supposed to get involved in murder cases, Mike has quite a series of challenges ahead of him—not counting his stormy relationship with schoolteacher Sarah Harris and the self-destructive streak he showed in The Poacher's Son (2010).
If Mike's second appearance isn't quite up to his striking debut, it's still a complex, heartfelt, altogether impressive piece of work.
(COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)
February 15, 2011
Game warden Mike Bowditch receives word that a woman has struck a deer, but when he dashes to the scene, he finds the road empty. Later, though, he finds the woman, who's been assaulted in a way that recalls a similar case--except the presumed perpetrator is now in jail. Doiron typically gets raves (and starred reviews from the likes of LJ), and he's also getting a 15-city tour for this one. A definite investment for thriller fans.
Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
Starred review from May 1, 2011
Rookie game warden Mike Bowditch, whose beat is the North Woods of Maine, is struggling with the events of the previous year (recounted in The Poachers Son, 2010); his relationship with his girlfriend, Sarah, is rocky; the other law-enforcement officers in the area consider him a loose cannon; and now its mud season. Coming back from a late-night call concerning trespassing ATV vandals, Mike stops at a deer-car accident only to find the driver and the deer missing. Unable to leave the investigation to the state troopers, and goaded on by his friend, retired warden Charlie, Mike hunts for the driver, a young woman, only to find her dead and evidence that points to a link with the areas most famous murder. While Trespasser initially may seem to lack some of the emotional punch of Poachers Son, it certainly makes up for it with both its realistic portrayal of life after traumatic events and its truly nail-biting finale. Doiron, editor of Down East magazine, delivers another perfectly plotted mystery peopled with multidimensional characters, but, in addition, his writing has matured. His descriptions of Maines midcoast are incredibly evocative of the sights, sounds, and smells of early spring, and the heart-pounding account of Mikes four-wheeling chase through the woods is a masterpiece of high-octane narrative. Suggest this series to fans of C. J. Box and Nevada Barr.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)
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