From Publishers Weekly
This is the 12th in a series (after 2001's The Singing of the Dead) that truly evolves rather than simply revisiting the same setting, although that setting is a doozy: an austere and beautiful Alaskan outback, populated with eccentrics and wild creatures. Kate Shugak could be considered a little of both, having grown up in this hinterland and being fond of her own ways. Kate discovers that park ranger Dan O'Brian is about to lose his job, probably because he is against drilling for oil in the local wildlife preserve. In an effort to garner support for Dan, Kate calls on her late grandmother's dear friends, Ruthe and Dina, who together taught Kate the name of every living thing in the park when she was a child. This longtime couple sits on a big chunk of pristine wilderness and works hard to protect other areas. Meanwhile, Dan has fallen for Christie Turner, the new waitress at the Roadhouse, and state trooper Jim Chopin, a notorious womanizer, is focused on the one woman who won't give him the time of day Kate. She isn't ready for a new relationship, as she is still mourning her dead lover, Jack Morgan, and trying to provide a stable environment for his teenage son, Johnny. When Dina is killed and Ruthe is put on the critical list at the hospital, Kate scrambles to solve the crime while keeping a balance in the rest of her life. Along the way, she finds herself in a brief but torrid encounter with Jim. Rich with details about life in this snowbound culture, the story moves at a steady pace to a classic ending.Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
The well-known Alaskan P.I. finds herself in the middle of a volatile situation involving proposed drilling for oil in a wildlife preserve. A ranger there is fired for political reasons, and then an important conservationist is poisoned. Be sure to have this on hand. Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
A cold winter in the Alaskan bush becomes even colder when a forest ranger loses his job in a politically motivated firing. Then a conservationist is murdered, and the tensions that have been swirling around the question of whether to drill for oil on the preserve erupt into local warfare. Aleutian PI Kate Shugak campaigns to save the fired ranger and, with the help of Alaska State Trooper Jim Chopin, attempts to solve the murder before more violence erupts. This twelfth Kate Shugak mystery is among the series' best, a definite return to form from the disappointing previous entry, The Singing of the Dead [BKL My 1 01]. The pacing is strong throughout, the environmental issues are handled sensitively, the scenery is striking as always, and the mystery's solution comes as a definite surprise. The Shugak series is an obvious read-alike for such celebrated wilderness mysteries as those by Nevada Barr and Sue Henry, but it also pairs well with Marcia Simpson's strong first novel Sound Tracks [BKL Je 1 & 15 01]. John Rowen
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
"Stabenow uses the merciless magnificence of her state to create a stunning backdrop for her intense and intelligent mysteries."--St. Petersburg Times
"An intelligent crime novel that reflects both [Stabenow's] love of wilderness and her understanding of the complex questions of profit versus the purity of the frontier."--Dallas Morning News
"The 12th in a series that truly evolves...rich with details about life in this snowbound culture, the story moves at a steady pace to a classic ending."--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Among the series' best."--Booklist
Review
"Stabenow uses the merciless magnificence of her state to create a stunning backdrop for her intense and intelligent mysteries."--St. Petersburg Times
"An intelligent crime novel that reflects both [Stabenow's] love of wilderness and her understanding of the complex questions of profit versus the purity of the frontier."--Dallas Morning News
"The 12th in a series that truly evolves¿rich with details about life in this snowbound culture, the story moves at a steady pace to a classic ending."--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Among the series' best."--Booklist
Book Description
Change never comes easy so when the news breaks that the new administration oil might be drilling for oil soon in a wildlife preserve in southeastern Alaska, home to P.I. Kate Shugak, battle lines are quickly drawn across the community. But for Kate, who hasn't been able to get back into her daily life ever since her lover's violent death a few months ago, it's a welcome reprieve from doing nothing.
Tensions run high when Kate's friend and chief park ranger, Dan O'Brien, is deemed "too green" for them by management and asked to take early retirement. Kate rallies the troops to fight for his job, but before she can really start throwing her weight around, a longtime resident is found brutally murdered. Alaska State Trooper Jim Chopin enlists Kate in the investigation, and it isn't long before she discovers that when it comes to the beauty and danger of living and dying in Alaska, nothing is as simple as it seems...
From the Inside Flap
Outstanding Praise For...
A Fine and Bitter Snow
"Stabenow uses the merciless magnificence of her state to create a stunning backdrop for her intense and intelligent mysteries."-St. Petersburg Times
"An intelligent crime novel that reflects both [Stabenow's] love of wilderness and her understanding of the complex questions of profit versus the purity of the frontier." -Dallas Morning News
The Singing of the Dead
"With well-drawn characters, splendid scenery, and an insider's knowledge of Alaskan history and politics, this fine novel ranks as one of Stabenow's best."--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Every time I think Dana Stabenow has gotten as good as she can get, she comes up with something better."--Washington Times
"The Alaskan wilderness is as much a character as any of the realistic, down-to-earth folks who people her novels."-Kirkus Reviews
Edgar Award-Winner Dana Stabenow and the Kate Shugak Novels
"Dana Stabenow excels at evoking the bleakness and beauty of the far north."--Seattle Times/Post Intelligencer
"If you haven't discovered this splendid North Country series, now is the time...highly entertaining."--USA Today
"Stabenow's stories...are lifted out of the ordinary by her splendid evocation of the Alaskan frontier, beautiful but dangerous, and its idiosyncratic and intriguing inhabitants."--San Diego Union Tribune
"One of the strongest voices in crime fiction."--Seattle Times
"Alaska's finest mystery writer."--Anchorage Daily News
"Stabenow is completely at ease with her detective and her environment. The Alaskan wilderness is as much a character as any of the realistic, down-to-earth folks who people her novel."--Dallas Morning News
"Stabenow's...books are always welcome for their Alaskan scenes and their true-to-life characters."--Rocky Mountain News
"Author Dana Stabenow displays a remarkable sense of pace in Killing Grounds. The wild Alaska [that] tourists seldom see comes to vivid, sprawling life. It's an interesting plot with vital characters."--Cleveland Plain Dealer
"Shugak is one of the great characters of modern crime fiction." --Laurie King, Register-Pajaronian (on Breakup)
"These Kate Shugak mysteries are seriously addictive. It is hard to put them down once you start."--Fairbanks Daily News
From the Back Cover
"Among the Series' Best."--Booklist
Change never comes easy so when the news breaks that the new administration oil might be drilling for oil soon in a wildlife preserve in southeastern Alaska, home to P.I. Kate Shugak, battle lines are quickly drawn across the community. But for Kate, who hasn't been able to get back into her daily life ever since her lover's violent death a few months ago, it's a welcome reprieve from doing nothing.
Tensions run high when Kate's friend and chief park ranger, Dan O'Brien, is deemed "too green" for them by management and asked to take early retirement. Kate rallies the troops to fight for his job, but before she can really start throwing her weight around, a longtime resident is found brutally murdered. Alaska State Trooper Jim Chopin enlists Kate in the investigation, and it isn't long before she discovers that when it comes to the beauty and danger of living and dying in Alaska, nothing is as simple as it seems¿
"The 12th in a series that truly evolves¿rich with details about life in this snowbound culture, the story moves at a steady pace to a classic ending."--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
About the Author
Dana Stabenow is the author of eleven previous Kate Shugak mysteries as well as four featuring Alaska State Trooper Liam Campbell, in addition to three science fiction novels. A graduate of the University of Alaska with a BA in journalism and an MFA, she won the Edgar Award for her first novel, A Cold Day for Murder. She writes a monthly column for Alaska Magazine and is an Explorer for Alaska Magazine Television, which airs on public television. Stabenow was born and still lives in Anchorage, Alaska.
A Fine and Bitter Snow: A Kate Shugak Novel FROM THE PUBLISHER
"Change never comes easy, but it comes just the same, and it's on its way to the Park, to Niniltna, in southeast Alaska. This time it concerns the possibility of drilling for oil in a wildlife preserve near there, near Aleutian P.I. Kate Shugak's home territory. Battle lines are drawn across the community, but at least it gives Kate something to do. Still just months after her lover's violent death, she is trying to get back into her daily life, though she doesn't know quite how." "Tensions run high as their resident park ranger, Dan O'Brian, is deemed "too green" by management and asked to take early retirement. Kate rallies the troops inside the Park to fight for his job, but before she can really start throwing her weight around, a longtime Park resident is brutally murdered and another is stabbed and left for dead." Alaska State Trooper Jim Chopin enlists Kate to help investigate, and together they tackle the loose ends: motive, timing, opportunity, and means. One thing is for certain - in Dana Stabenow's masterful crime novels about the beauty and the danger of living and dying in Alaska, nothing is as simple as it seems.
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
This is the 12th in a series (after 2001's The Singing of the Dead) that truly evolves rather than simply revisiting the same setting, although that setting is a doozy: an austere and beautiful Alaskan outback, populated with eccentrics and wild creatures. Kate Shugak could be considered a little of both, having grown up in this hinterland and being fond of her own ways. Kate discovers that park ranger Dan O'Brian is about to lose his job, probably because he is against drilling for oil in the local wildlife preserve. In an effort to garner support for Dan, Kate calls on her late grandmother's dear friends, Ruthe and Dina, who together taught Kate the name of every living thing in the park when she was a child. This longtime couple sits on a big chunk of pristine wilderness and works hard to protect other areas. Meanwhile, Dan has fallen for Christie Turner, the new waitress at the Roadhouse, and state trooper Jim Chopin, a notorious womanizer, is focused on the one woman who won't give him the time of day Kate. She isn't ready for a new relationship, as she is still mourning her dead lover, Jack Morgan, and trying to provide a stable environment for his teenage son, Johnny. When Dina is killed and Ruthe is put on the critical list at the hospital, Kate scrambles to solve the crime while keeping a balance in the rest of her life. Along the way, she finds herself in a brief but torrid encounter with Jim. Rich with details about life in this snowbound culture, the story moves at a steady pace to a classic ending. (June 17) Forecast: A five-city author tour will help build on the momentum of last year's well-received The Singing of the Dead, though generic jacket art doesn't signal that the author transcends the "regional" category. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.
Library Journal
The well-known Alaskan P.I. finds herself in the middle of a volatile situation involving proposed drilling for oil in a wildlife preserve. A ranger there is fired for political reasons, and then an important conservationist is poisoned. Be sure to have this on hand. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.
Kirkus Reviews
Kate Shugak's 12th adventure (The Singing of the Dead, 2001, etc.) begins with a threat against the Park, the beloved wilderness she shares with Stabenow's other regulars. Chief Ranger Dan O'Brian is being encouraged to retire by an administration that sees Alaska as acres of oilfields covered by so much snow. When Kate mobilizes her network to protect O'Brian, she discovers that not everyone agrees with his environmental policies. Some members of the Native Association badly want more jobs, and miners and big-game hunting guides like John Letourneau would welcome a, well, less tightly regulated business environment. In due course, Kate calls on friends of her grandmother, Dina Willner and Ruthe Bauman, still in old age adventurous souls and outspoken environmentalists who are happy to speak up for Ranger O'Brian. But before they can, Dandy Mike walks into their cabin to find Dina stabbed to death, Ruthe mortally wounded, and Dan O'Brian, bloody and confused, behind the door. Even though Dan refuses to tell all he knows, Trooper Jim Chopin clears him and arrests a homeless veteran clutching the murder weapon and muttering about angels. Then John Letourneau, Dina and Ruthe's neighbor and business rival, types out a confession and shoots himself. Have Kate and Jim, distracted by their explosive mutual attraction, missed something? Stabenow enjoys tantalizing her fans with Jim and Kate's romance, but her pleasure in her beloved creations can be self-indulgent. When she finally gets around to the serious business of murder, it's satisfying but anticlimactic.