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Sunday, February 21, 2010

MYSTERIES IN THE GREAT OUTDOORS
PAUL BIRKHEAD

There’s nothing quite like the great outdoors to clear the mind and refresh the spirit. That is unless the great outdoors just happens to be the setting for a gruesome murder or two. Some of the best novels I’ve read lately have featured the rough territory of the western United States as their backdrop. Maybe it’s the majestic mountain scenery or the tough personalities that one tends to find out west, but stories that take place in those types of locations just seem to draw me in.

C. J. Box is a writer based out of Wyoming who has written a series of mysteries with a game warden as his protagonist. Joe Pickett, game warden of Twelve Sleep County, Wyoming, is a hero in the classic vein. He has his faults, but for the most part he’s a stand-up guy just trying to do the best job he can on the public payroll. In the first few pages of the Pickett novels, Joe always seems to find himself smack dab in the middle of a murder mystery. Though he’s been told countless times to back down or not ruffle any feathers, somehow Joe can never help himself as he follows lead after lead and we love him for it. Environmental terrorists and corrupt bureaucrats alike should be wary when Joe Pickett gets it in his head to see something through.

Nevada Barr is another author who has written mysteries that take place largely outdoors. Taking inspiration from her employment as a National Park Service ranger in several parks, Nevada Barr created her much beloved character Anna Pigeon. Anna is a park service ranger who gets reassigned frequently and finds mystery wherever she goes. Her adventures have taken place in several parks, including Yosemite, Carlsbad Caverns, Cumberland Island National Seashore, and the Natchez Trace Parkway.

Another series that takes place, not in a park setting, but in the wild backcountry of Alaska, are the Jessie Arnold mystery books. These books are written by Sue Henry, an award-winning author, who makes her home in Alaska. The heroine that Sue Henry created, Jessie Arnold, is a champion dogsled racer. In the series, Jessie Arnold continually gets tangled up in murder mysteries and uses her amateur detective skills to their fullest when solving them.

If you like murder mysteries or stories that take place in the wilderness or in the majesty of our national parks, you’re sure to enjoy each of these series. Come by Rowan Public Library and get hooked on books with adventures in them as wild as the great outdoors.

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