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Skeleton Picnic

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Third generation Kanab residents Rolly and Abigail Rogers come from a long line of dedicated pot hunters who scour the desert southwest in search of valuable antiquities. When the Utah couple fails to return from a weekend skeleton picnic, (pot hunting trip) along the desolate Arizona Strip, local Sheriff Charley Sutter turns to BLM Law Enforcement Ranger J.D. Books for help.

When Books searches the missing couple's home for clues about their disappearance, he discovers the house has been burglarized and a valuable collection of ancient Anasazi and Fremont Indian antiquities stolen. Soon a search and rescue operation finds the Rogers' truck and trailer at an abandoned campsite near an ancient Anasazi ruin that has been recently excavated. Footprints and other evidence lead Books to conclude that the couple may have been overpowered by a small group of unknown assailants.

Sheriff Sutter assigns an attractive young deputy, Beth Tanner, to investigate the burglary of the Rogers' home under the watchful eye of Books. Together they track some of the stolen property to a pawn shop in St. George, and ultimately to a young Navajo man with a criminal record. Keeping this man alive long enough to make him talk, however, proves difficult.

Books and Tanner soon learn of a shadowy group of armed Indian police who patrol vast swaths of tribal and federal lands in search of anyone desecrating ancient Native American burial sites. They also discover several recent unsolved cases in the Four Corners region where individuals disappeared into the desert wilderness under suspicious circumstances, never to be heard from again. Could the disappearance of the Rogers, and others, be the responsibility of this group?

As Books and Tanner close in on those responsible, Books' own survival skills will be tested when he is unwittingly drawn into a remote part of the Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument. There he is forced into a deadly game of cat-and-mouse, where the hunter becomes the hunted, and only one person gets to go home alive.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 16, 2012
      People’s distrust of the federal government figures prominently in Norman’s atmospheric second mystery featuring Bureau of Land Management ranger J.D. Books of Kanab, Utah (after 2010’s On Deadly Ground). When Roland and Abby Rogers disappear while on a trip seeking ancient artifacts, and their home is burglarized, Books and a host of other law enforcement officers get on the case. The arrest of 20-year-old Joe Benally, who pawned some of the artifacts stolen from the couple’s home, serves to implicate others, including someone close to Books, but does nothing to help locate Roland and Abby. Details about pot hunting, such as that it’s both illegal and yet a generally accepted practice in many communities, lend interest. As Books and his well-depicted colleagues get closer to the truth, the danger increases while the chances of finding the Rogers alive decrease. Readers will hope Books and company will return real soon. Author tour.

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  • English

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