Reviewer Wally Wood: Wally is an editor and writer, has published three novels, Getting Oriented:A Novel about Japan, The Girl in the Photo and Death in a Family Business. He obtained his MA in creative writing in 2002 from the City University of New York and has worked with a number of authors as a ghostwriter and collaborator.
With an extensive background in a variety of business subjects, his credits include twenty-one nonfiction books. He spent twenty-five years as a trade magazine reporter and editor and has been a volunteer writing and business teacher in state and federal prisons for more than twenty years. He has finished his fourth novel and has translated a collection of Japanese short stories into English.
Author: Margaret
Mizushima
Publisher: Crooked Lane Books
ISBN: 978-1-6438-5746-6
One traditional suggestion
writers hear is, “Write what you know.” And that’s where
Margaret Mizushima started.
She lives on a small ranch in Colorado, has been married to her veterinarian husband almost forty years. When sh\e decided to write a series, which became the Timber Creek K-9 mysteries, “I knew that one of the characters needed to be a vet. In real life, however, vets may solve medical mysteries, but rarely (or perhaps I should say almost never) are they involved in murder mysteries. I decided that a veterinarian and a K-9 handler could make an interesting crime fighting duo—trio if you count the dog, and dogs should always be counted.”
Deputy Mattie Cobb, her German shepherd partner Robo, and veterinarian Cole Walker have now been involved in seven police procedurals in the Colorado high country, the latest being Striking Range.
It starts with two exciting chapters. Mattie and San Diego cold case detective Jim Hauck visit a Colorado prison to interview the man who tried to kill Mattie in an earlier book and who may have killed her father thirty years earlier. When Mattie and Jim Hauck reach the Colorado state prison where they will finally get to interview him, he’s found freshly dead in his cell. There’s one clue: a map leading to Timber Creek and rugged Redstone Ridge. Mattie and Hauck photograph the map with their cell phones.
(Quibbles: What kind of
prison needs an interview room with an adjoining viewing room and
recording equipment? Would staff be locked inside the room during a
prison lockdown? From the outside, yes, with instructions to stay
put; but locked inside, no. Finally, no one—not a CO, lawyer,
detective, visitor—brings a cell phone into prison. But perhaps
they do things differently in Colorado and these pettifogging notes
do not diminish the pleasure of the book.)
While Mattie
is visiting prison, Cole is delivering a litter of pups Robo has just
sired. The description of the canine c-section is as exciting as
anything in the book.
Left to explore the map’s
clue without him, Mattie, Robo, Hauck, and a local rancher journey
into the burned forest surrounding Redstone Ridge. But before they
can finish their search, however, they’re called to help
investigate the death of a young woman found in a campground filled
with elk hunters. Identification of the deceased points to her having
recently given birth, but the infant is nowhere to be found.
As
a deadly storm descends upon the mountains, covering everything with
a layer of ice and snow, Mattie and her team search for the missing
newborn. The storm batters the area, taking its toll on the team and
forcing the sheriff to call in reinforcements. When new evidence
surfaces that this is not the only baby to vanish under suspicious
circumstances, they decide that finding the woman’s killer will
lead them to her baby, making them even more desperate to solve the
case.
Then Cole goes missing, stranded alone in the high
country with a person that Mattie now suspects is the mastermind
behind several murders, including her father’s. She and Robo take
to the trail to find Cole–but the killer has a cold-blooded plan
that threatens them all.
Among the book’s many pleasures:
—Robo. He’s a character. He may not be much of a conversationalist, but he communicates clearly.
—The landscape. Mizushima’s descriptions of the high country and small-town life make me want to go there.
—The dogs and their handlers. Robo eventually is not alone, but is joined by K-9 dogs trained to search for drugs, or cadavers, or explosives.
—The relationship between Mattie and Cole and the other characters. Mattie respects and is respected by her boss, the Sheriff, and she works well with a detective who, unlike Mattie, is not native to Timber Creek.
—Finally, Mizushima creatively avoids the cliché of the villain threatening to kill the female cop in the last few pages of the book.
You do not have to have read the earlier Timber Creek K-9 mysteries to enjoy Striking Range, however it will improve your pleasure if you do read Burning Ridge first. In fact, the series is entertaining enough, you might start with Killing Trail to see how Mizushima has been able to build and sustain this world and the people in it.