Endangered

Game Warden Joe Pickett has just discovered a massacre. Someone has slaughtered over twenty sage grouse – nearly an entire breeding group – and left their bodies to rot, shooting them just for malevolent thrills.  Joe goes to work processing the scene, but then receives a phone call bringing much worse news: the sheriff is enroute to the hospital in Billings with the body of a young woman who was found beaten very near to death, then dumped on the side of the highway.  The sheriff is calling because the girl could very well be Joe’s adopted daughter April, who ran off with a rodeo star named Dallas Cates  at the end of the last book –  a man who the sheriff and warden both suspect of being involved in an assault when he was in high school.   The Cates family is all kinds of trouble, Joe is warned, especially that mother of theirs.   Things get worse, though:  as Joe and the sheriff try to get to the bottom of who might have just rendered his girl brain-dead,   Mary Beth calls from the hospital and reports that she just saw Nate Romanowski being wheeled in: hed been shot three times at close range with a shotgun and wasn’t expected to make it.  From such pain and confuse comes more of the more intense Pickett novels, one with a surprising ending that makes me eager to get to Vicious Circle, which appears to follow off events here while not being a direct sequel. 

There is a lot going on in this novel, and unlike Stone Cold there’s no comparative fluff like the “Sheridan is scared of her classmate” line.  Joe’s actual game warden job is part of the story, of course, but his investigation into the Sage Grouse Massacree actually touches on the April drama,   since the Cates’ property is adjacent and when he goes down in his official capacity as garden warden to ask Dallas’ crazy family if they saw anything suspicious, he gets a lead that proves useful – and  sees some possible truth to Dallas’ claim that he was in no state to beat up an eighteen-year-old because he himself had been injured while bull-riding.  As it turns out, people were right to warn Joe about Mama Cates: the whole family is crazy as they are mean,  and none meaner or weirder than her.  There’s another plot I won’t go into because of spoilers, but there’s someone on the ranch whose viewpoint we slide in to from time to time who give us a closer view as to how messed up the Cates’ are. 

This was an excellent entry in the Pickett books, with three plots that weave in together, a lot of emotional intensity and action,   and the running joke of Joe being hard on state trucks continues.  

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WWW Wednesday

WHAT have you finished recently? Three Inch Teeth, CJ Box.

WHAT are you reading now? Battle Mountain, CJ Box. And then…I shall be caught up.

WHAT are you reading next? Will probably turn my full attention to Summer of Blood by Dan Jones; a CS Lewis mystery; or something that does not involve a game warden and/or Wyoming. Or I may begin the Walter Longmire series, who knows.

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Books that Surprised Me & Teaser Tuesday

Today’s treble T is books that surprised us. But first, a trio of teases from…various CJ Box books.

Instagram Post Thursday, April 18: “Three Day Weekend Plans”. I finished Three Inch Teeth at lunch.

“You don’t want to give mixed up with them,” Joe said. “They’re bitter and they’re well armed and they hate the feds.”
“They sound like my kind of guys,” Nate said.

“The way they tell is, the whole place is full of intransigent locals who don’t respect their authority.”
“Probably just me,” Joe said.

“He’s happy and he lives with a great woman who keeps him on the straight and narrow, [Liv] said.
“Which is a good thing for everyone concerned,” Joe said. “Left to his own devices, he tends to hurt people or sit naked in trees.”

And now, “Books that Surprised Me”. This will be very off-the-cuff, hit-`em-as-they’re-pitched.

(1) Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone, JK Rowling. Although my generation grew up with Harry Potter, not until the seventh book was released did I give in to curiosity to read them. (My HP remarks were some of this blog’s first posts!) I was ‘bewitched’ immediately, roaring through the books so quickly that I could participate in the frustration of waiting for a chance to read Deathly Hallows, since it had just been released and was quite popular with my university’s student body. My move to university coincided with Harry discovering his own new world, so I think that

(2) All Quiet on the Western Front. Read this in middle or high school (same building, so memories are muddled) and was surprised to realize the main character and friends were German. I was still young enough that I’d neve r been exposed to analyzing or experiencing a situation from different points of view.

(3) The Pigman, Paul Zindel. I don’t know what led me to reading this, but I was young for it and it would be my first time encountering serious themes like loss and regret in literature. It was the first book that ever made my eyes leak. It’s the story of two teenagers who make a game of calling random numbers in the phone book, and then competing to see who can get people to talk the longest before hanging up: John and Lorraine (how do I remember those names?) accidentally befriend an old man, though, and things develop from there.

(4) The Art of Living, Sharon Lebell. During an emotionally rough time at college back in 2008, I read The Meditations and decided to begin reading the Stoics in general, beginning with this translation — or interpretation — of Epictetus’ Handbook. I can still remember being tucked into a corner of the library scribbling quotes from this into my journal/commonplace book at the time. I was surprised by how approachable Epicteus’ approach to life was.

True philosophy doesn’t involve exotic rituals, mysterious liturgy, or quaint beliefs. […] It is, of course, the love of wisdom. It is the art of living a good life. […] Philosophy is intended for everyone, and it is authentically practiced only by those who wed it with action in the world toward a better life for all.

(5) The Jungle, Upton Sinclair. I’d expected this to be an author tract, but was surprised by what was for the most part a compelling story with a sympathetic main character who — unfortunately — disappears in the last fifth by the tedious propaganda.

(6) The Fountainhead, Ayn Rand. I approached this with a similar attitude as The Jungle, expecting nothing in it but long speeches. I found this story of a man’s fight for individual integrity, especially artistic, to be fascinating, as were the architectural sidebars.

(7) The Death and Life of Great American Cities, Jane Jacobs. This book upended my political worldview before I was a third of the way in.

(8) The Music Shop, Rachel Joyce. I didn’t expect this to ignite a fiction-heavy 2024.

(9) Open Season, CJ Box. I obviously was not expecting this book to result in two entire months being hijacked by a game warden.

(10) Electric Universe: The Shocking True Story of Electricity. This book included (among other things) the story of a scientist who was taught to paratroop drop so he could raid a German radar station.

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Stone Cold

There’s something rotten in the state of Wyoming – and specifically, the county of Medicine Wheel, in the northern reaches of the state.  Seems in the last few years some financial grandee retired there and has been buying up everything, and there are rumors that he may be behind a murder-for-hire operation that’s been knocking off high-profile business and tech kingpins guilty of various moral outrages, but shielded from them by virtue of the crimes being white-collar  – or more directly, by their money.  The governor wants his Special Agent Game Warden Joe Pickett to mosey on up and do a little sniffing around – unofficially, of course.   Officially he’s delivering a load of turkeys to help repopulate the area, and then assist the game warden there in a few other game warden matters. When Joe arrives, though, his reputation has preceded him: the resident game warden gives him the stink eye and asks what the governor has got him up here doing.  So much for Secret Agent Game Wardening.    Of the Pickett books I’ve read to date, this is arguably the one with the most far-fetched premise, but   Box pulls off a fun thriller regardless.

When the governor mentioned Medicine Wheel, Joe was not happy:  Medicine Wheel county is even more remote and unattractive than the county he was hidden away in after punching a small-town cop to expedite the governor’s business back in Below Zero.  The entire county has in recent years subsisted on government benefits – disability payments, etc, plus a little under the table action from helping tourists find and shoot elk. In the last five years, though, some mysterious stranger has come into town and put people to work –  and they’ll very grateful to Mr. “Wolfgang Templeton”.  So grateful, in fact, that if some outsider starts asking questions about him, even the innocent kind an ordinary tourist might ask,  they’ll find themselves being encouraged to leave. The last man the governor sent up here died in a mysterious cabin fire, and the black remains are still standing when Joe checks in. It doesn’t take him long to realize that pretty much everyone in this county is deeply corrupt, so much so that they don’t even pretend to take Joe’s legitimate game-warden concerns seriously: one of Templeton’s men  is pulling out large fish way over the limit, and both the judge and the resident game warden treat Joe with contempt for suggesting they enforce the laws of the land.    There’s a least one independent-minded woman in the county Joe can coax information out of, though, and Joe uses his realization that his cabin is bugged to begin  manipulating the malfactors as he starts learning whats going on.  At the same time, he’s startled to realize that his friend  Nate Romanowski, the wilderness man with his own moral code, is evidently in the pay of Templeton –  and Templeton’s home has an even more shocking guest. 

Although the premise of this was rather wild, and there’s a Sheridan subplot that just seems like filler,   I enjoyed seeing Joe on his own, pitted against multiple cretins and using his own creativity and wit to evade and overcome them, and his own humanity gets to shine further when he confronts one man who has morally compromised himself to assist his daughter, who has had severe medical issues growing up.  There’s also some comic relief when Nate is forced to attend a dinner party and wear formal clothing: it’s a bit like Belle trying to civilize the Beast, and  yes, there is a Belle present. 

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Breaking Point

While on patrol counting herds and listening for sounds of poachers,  Game Warden Joe Pickett notices a Forestry fence that’s been cut. Upon investigation the warden realizes this fence was cut relatively recently, and whoever did it may still be around.  Soon enough he stumbles upon a familiar face, a construction manager in town named Butch. Butch is a good fellow, trustworthy – and an obsessive hunter. Although Jim finds Butch’s behavior a little odd – he’s carrying an awful big pack for someone who is just scouting elk –   after giving Butch a warning about repairing the fence on his way back out, Joe  moves on. Later that day, though,   he learns that federal goonie boys and the sheriff all have Butch’s house surrounded: seems Butch is wanted for the death of two EPA agents.  Joe is staggered by this, but the hits will keep coming. Breaking Point  is a great thriller about men pushed to their limits,  with a fiery conclusion that sees Joe scrambling for his life through a generational wildfire. 

Imagine everything anyone hates about federal bureaucracy –  its constitutionally objectionable combination of judge, jury, and execution;  its vast morass of rules that no one knows about until they’re used to loot and ruin the public;  contempt for the public’;   the laziness and pettiness of its all-too-human officials;  and the sheer brutality it can release,  both in terms of blood and money — and distill that into a plot.  If you love hating goonie boys, then boy is this the book for you – even without the climactic ending!   A signature of the Pickett series is that something happens, the locals spot an easy answer and jump on it, and Joe annoys everyone by thinking there’s more to the story and then roaming around playing detective, getting into trouble, and somehow wrecking his truck.  This time, things are a little different, since  Joe is directly asked for help: the fed boys want to find Butch on the mountain, and they’re city-slickers with soft hands and legs that have never straddled a horse. The mountain is treacherous enough for experienced hands, but tenderfoots?  Things get worse, though:  The blustering EPA head, who turns out to be faking Hispanic identity for DIE points,   puts a bounty on Butch’s head that attracts trigger-happy vigilantes. Combined with  the fakespanic director’s..extreme means of retribution,  the mountain is a very  dangerous place to be, and Joe will be pushed to his emotional and physical extremes trying to deal with everything.

Breaking Point was a superb Pickett thriller, putting our game warden into a tight corner and allowing us to see his character – inner character – at its best.

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Χριστός Ανέστη!

Christos anesti to my Christian readers: today is an interesting day because both the Orthodox church and the Roman church (along with its Protestant offspring) are both celebrating Pascha/Easter on the same day. So, here’s the only good thing to come out of COVID, a group chant via Zoom:

Let God arise, and let His enemies be scattered!
And let them that hate Him flee from before His face
Christ is Risen from the dead
Trampling down Death by death
And upon those in the tombs
Bestowing Life

I really like the combined voices, but I also love this version, which applies the lyrics of the troparion against an Appalachian folk melody.

And in completely-different-land, I think tomorrow I am going to surrender to the fact that CJ Box is not going to let Read of England happen, and begin posting reviews for all of the Pickett books I’ve been reading.

I have a problem.

.

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Literary Tag Meme

Lin @ Lin’s Perspective just posted a bookish meme, and since I keep reading books and then scheduling the reviews for May because I’m not supposed to be reading anything but English fiction, history, etc, here’s the meme for ya.

First Read of the YearStrange Weather in Tokyo,  an interesting book about an unusual relationship between a woman and her former teacher.

What Are You Currently Reading?   Long Range, CJ Box;   CS Lewis Investigates: Mystery at Rake Hall.   Within a breath of finishing Long Range but lunch only lasts so long. 

What Book are you Dying to Read? Elon Musk by Walter Isaacon, because  he’s such a…..weird  and singular figure, shall we say, and I’m curious about his background.

A Series You Want to Start?   The Walter Longmire series  about a sheriff in Wyoming, because I’m obviously not spending enough time in fictional Wyoming, what with my twenty Box books in the last month and a half.  

A Series You Want to Finish.  I want to continue the CJ Box books, but not finish. Finish means there are no more books and I have to sit around waiting a whole year like I do with Harris, Cornwell, etc. 

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WWW Wednesday & Social Media Book Reccommendations

WHAT have you finished reading recently? The Disappeared, C.J. Box

WHAT are you reading presently? Wolf Pack, CJ Box; CS Lewis Investigates: Mystery at Rake Hall.

WHAT are you reading next? Realistically, Long Range by CJ Box. I have seven scheduled reviews for May because I’m trying to keep April RoE-focused, but that’s obviously on the struggle bus this year.

Today’s prompt from Long and Short Reviews is books we found on social media, which is….a hard ask, because I don’t write down how books get pushed onto my radar, and I encounter far too many books in a given week to remember. Some of my new-to-me books are direct recommendations from other bloggers, and some are from friends’ reviews on goodreads. I’m going to go the lazy route and just check out some of my recent Goodreads TBR adds. So, working from the most recent backwards:

Pretty sure a Confederate Navy ship would have flown the Naval Jack, not the battle flag of the infantry…

(1) A Short History of the World According to Sheep, Sally Coulthard. Should be a shear delight.

(2) Good Nature: The New Science of How Nature Improves our Health, Kathy Willis

(3) Called to Freedom: Retrieving Christian Liberty in an Age of License, Bradford Littlejohn

(4) India’s War: World War II and the Making of Modern South Asia, Srinath Raghavan,

(5) Last Flag Down: The Epic Journey of the Last Confederate Warship, John Baldwin

(6) The Curious Kitten at the Chibineko Kitchen, Yuta Takahashi. I have no idea what this one is about, but the cover reminded me so much of What You are Looking For is in the Library that I added it on sight.

(7) Lady Clementine, Marie Benedict.

(8) Twelve Trees: The Deep Roots of Our Future, Daniel Lewis

(9) Kolyma Tales, Varlam Shalamov. Pretty sure I found this via substack, specifically Rod Dreher quoting The New Criteron piece “How the Great Truth Dawned“:

In Shalamov’s Kolyma Tales—I regard these stories, which first became known in the late 1960s, as the greatest since Chekhov—a narrator observes: “The intellectual becomes a coward, and his own brain provides a ‘justification’ of his own actions. He can persuade himself of anything” as needed.

(10) The Love of Learning and the Desire for God: A Study of Monastic Culture, Jean LeClercq

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Teaser Tuesday

Normally, he never took much notice of what a female student was wearing. That way danger lay, even if you were saying something gallant about their outfit. And Jack Lewis wasn’t that kind of man. (C.S. Lewis Investigates: MYSTERY AT RAKE HALL, Maureen Paton. )

“What do you mean you shot him and then hit him with a fish?!” (THE DISAPPEARED, CJ Box.)

That box novel is about an English lady vanishing while in Wyoming, so it’s ….totally Read of England compliant. And let’s ignore the fact that it’s #18 in a series that I’ve officially only read twelve of. And don’t you go looking at my goodreads account or my What I’ve Read This Year page, either. Today’s TTT is unpopular opinions, but I so rarely express a popular bookish opinion that I would not know where to start.

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The Professionals

Since 1915,  Martin Falconer has been flying birds above France in His Majesty’s Royal Flying Corps,  but  as the days pass he’s beginning to wonder how much longer he can buck the odds.  The aerial carnage has gotten especially bad now that the Germans have these new Albatross engines that fly circles around Sopwith Pups,   leading to the nineteen year old Falconer seeing so many men and officers drop from the skies during Bloody April that he’s given command  of the squadron. The plot of The Professionals follows Martin back and forth from England to France several times as his units are cycled off the front and into more easy duty (homeland flying is mostly chasing Zeppelins and Gothas when they can be spotted),  then back to battle  where we experience the excitement of aerial action, the growing psychological toll that constant death has on the fliers, and the comradery of the air, with English and German fliers both treating their downed rivals to feats of whiskey before having to turn them over to higher authorities.  The Red Baron makes several appearances, both in the air and – well,  let’s not ascend into spoiler heights, shall we?

I’ve never failed to enjoy a Hennessey story, especially his air works, and the ones set in WW1 have a particular interest for me because I’m not as familiar with the equipment as WW2 and so spend a lot of time googling airplane models and enjoying this era of experimentation as aerial warfare was beginning to get its legs on.    The only fly in the soup is that there is a potential romantic interest named Charley, which is rather confusing given that another Charley featured rather prominently in the Kelly MacGuire stories, a key part in MacGuire’s emotional life and growth.  I think I accidentally jumped in to the middle of a series here: Hennessey had so many that’s easy to do. Fortunately all of his books can be read by themselves, though when there’s long relationships (platonic or otherwise) the reader does miss witnessing  those mature.  This one has a heck of a ending, I will say, very Boys’ Own.

Click to reveal spoiler….

Marty and a compatriot escape a German prisoner, hunker down near a German airfield until they see a vulnerable plane, steal it, and then race to Britain while evading German fighters who are chasing them, British fighters who are “intercepting” them, and the anti-air defenses of both parties.

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