
Slightly less absorbing than the best Hillermans, but darkly atmospheric and ultimately powerful-with (as usual) effective contrasts among the theological beliefs of rationalist Leaphorn, mystical Chee, and other Navajos.Īnother sweltering month in Charlotte, another boatload of mysteries past and present for overworked, overstressed forensic anthropologist Temperance Brennan.Ī week after the night she chases but fails to catch a mysterious trespasser outside her town house, some unknown party texts Tempe four images of a corpse that looks as if it’s been chewed by wild hogs, because it has been. And finally each sleuth independently arrives at the solution-which involves an anthropological discovery, a 20-year-old secret, and a harrowing, cliffside confrontation/finale (complete with critical injuries and two helicopters). Suspicion falls on a former Utah State Senator and rancher-until the old rascal turns up dead himself.

They trace the route by which pots have been illegally dug up, passed to a middleman (a local Born-Again revivalist), and then sold-either to the anthropologist or a New York dealer. They talk to other anthropologists working in the region.

So Leaphom (out of curiosity) and Chee (out of grudging respect for Leaphorn) are soon working in tandem. Meanwhile, Chee (still brooding on the departure of girlfriend Mary) investigates the theft of a backhoe-and discovers the corpses of two men, shot to death while in the act of digging up (in an illegal area) the very same sort of artifacts that Friedman-Bernal was obsessed with. 600-1200 A.D.) ceramic pottery of the vanished Anasazi civilization? She's been missing for a month, was on the verge of some breakthrough, and was last seen setting off for an undisclosed wilderness location. Leaphorn, traumatized by his wife's recent death, is on leave and plans to quit the force-but he finds himself caught up nonetheless in a local puzzle: what happened to anthropologist Eleanor Friedman-Bernal, who was collecting and studying ancient (ca. Joe Leaphorn, young Officer Jim Chee-again share the sleuthing, more or less by accident, in another richly somber blend of mystery, socio-theology, psychology, and (this time) anthropology. Hillerman's two Navajo Tribal Police heroes-middle-aged Lieut.
