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Blackening Song

Blackening Song

List Price: $14.95
Your Price: $10.17
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Tony Hillerman fans will likely enjoy this book.
Review: A murder mystery set on the Navajo rez, Blackening Song reads like a Tony Hillerman novel, but Jim Chee and Joe Leaphorn are nowhere to be found. Ellah Clah is the protagonist in this fast-paced and engaging story. As with all good mysteries, the last hundred pages or so must be read in one sitting. Though perhaps not as well written or complex as some of Hillerman's better works, Blackening Song was certainly a satisfying read. Indeed, so satisfying, that I'm planning on reading the other books in this series - to help tide me over until Tony's next one.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Disappointing "Gothic" plot victimizes subjects, readers
Review: By the time I finished this overly long (382 pages) mystery, I was thoroughly irritated with the authors for their unfortunate bait-and-switch approach. The Thurlos start off with a potentially interesting main character, FBI agent Navajo Ella Clah, in the naturally attractive Southwest setting. All too soon, however, the nasty, lurid plot repeatedly lurches unevenly between violent physical confrontations and Ella's immature interior monologues -- with timeouts for her brother's allegedly tradition medicine protective rituals. In addition, as another reviewer has noted, the dialogue too often is unnatural, even donwright unlikely. Even more unfortunate is the sensational presentation of the darker aspects of some traditional Navajo beliefs.

Fortunately, mystery enthusiasts and fans of the Southwest can read one or all of Tony Hillerman's better crafted and much more culturally accurate novels! Happily he never victimizes nor insults the Dineh.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Disappointing "Gothic" plot victimizes subjects, readers
Review: By the time I finished this overly long (382 pages) mystery, I was thoroughly irritated with the authors for their unfortunate bait-and-switch approach. The Thurlos start off with a potentially interesting main character, FBI agent Navajo Ella Clah, in the naturally attractive Southwest setting. All too soon, however, the nasty, lurid plot repeatedly lurches unevenly between violent physical confrontations and Ella's immature interior monologues -- with timeouts for her brother's allegedly tradition medicine protective rituals. In addition, as another reviewer has noted, the dialogue too often is unnatural, even donwright unlikely. Even more unfortunate is the sensational presentation of the darker aspects of some traditional Navajo beliefs.

Fortunately, mystery enthusiasts and fans of the Southwest can read one or all of Tony Hillerman's better crafted and much more culturally accurate novels! Happily he never victimizes nor insults the Dineh.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Shallow, poorly plotted, cardboard characters
Review: I read a lot of mysteries, including Hillerman, Michael McGarrity, James Doss, James Burke, but I could not finish Blackening Song. The plot was episodic, with events unrelated to each other and no rising arc of development. Characters' motivations were unconvincing and the characters seemed to undergo sudden and inexplicable personality changes. Dialogue was wooden, with Clah frequently asserting that her "special training" made her superior to others. Who talks like that? Clah also ricochets between trusting some characters and suspecting everyone, which was confusing. I've lived close to the Rez and did not find the authors'presentation of the area or culture convincing. You can pass on this one and wait for Hillerman or McGarrity's next book.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Shallow, poorly plotted, cardboard characters
Review: I was looking for a Hillerman-type book and I found it. This was a great book!! It only took me about 3 days to read because I couldn't put it down. This complements/competes very well with Hillerman's style. Loved it! Watch out Tony! :)

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: As Good As Hillerman!
Review: I was looking for a Hillerman-type book and I found it. This was a great book!! It only took me about 3 days to read because I couldn't put it down. This complements/competes very well with Hillerman's style. Loved it! Watch out Tony! :)

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Not a Traditional Cajun Cooking Lyric
Review: The Thurlos got their start writing romances for lines such as Second Chance at Love and Harlequin Intrigue. It shows in this first book in this series. For instance there is the recently widowed mother who keeps making coy attempts at matchmaking her daughter(didn't realize matchmaking was one of the stages of grief); the FBI agent with an anger control problem who could have doubled as a Harlequin alpha jerk hero-- oh, but he must have some redeeming qualities, he likes children; and the all round good guy old high school flame who everyone but the heroine seems to realize lusts after her.

The action scenes are also clumsy. My favorite was the scene where Ella is driving a pickup truck (I lost track of the number of pickup trucks that were destroyed in the making of this story), there is a slavering, biting coyote head stuck through the back window. She draws her gun from a (waist?) holster and shoots it between the eyes without out even going into a ditch. Then she shoots one off the hood through the windshield. I would think it would be better for her ability to see had she slammed on the brakes or hit the accelerator instead. Physically improbable as these actions are, it is still preferable to the fact that Ella tends to need to be rescued at most other points in the book.

She does, however, have the Nancy Drew like quality of stumbling on just the place where the bad guys are having a palaver at just the time to hear what she needs to hear to advance the plot.

All in all, I cannot see any reason to compare this book to Tony Hillerman. I will admit though that there are a couple of effective scary moments-- immediately spoiled by Ella's shrill insistance there is no supernatural agents involved. If I was Navaho I might also be offended by the scene where a ritual singer is shot and the whole crowd rushes for their cars without even checking to make sure first aid isn't needed.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Not a Traditional Cajun Cooking Lyric
Review: The Thurlos got their start writing romances for lines such as Second Chance at Love and Harlequin Intrigue. It shows in this first book in this series. For instance there is the recently widowed mother who keeps making coy attempts at matchmaking her daughter(didn't realize matchmaking was one of the stages of grief); the FBI agent with an anger control problem who could have doubled as a Harlequin alpha jerk hero-- oh, but he must have some redeeming qualities, he likes children; and the all round good guy old high school flame who everyone but the heroine seems to realize lusts after her.

The action scenes are also clumsy. My favorite was the scene where Ella is driving a pickup truck (I lost track of the number of pickup trucks that were destroyed in the making of this story), there is a slavering, biting coyote head stuck through the back window. She draws her gun from a (waist?) holster and shoots it between the eyes without out even going into a ditch. Then she shoots one off the hood through the windshield. I would think it would be better for her ability to see had she slammed on the brakes or hit the accelerator instead. Physically improbable as these actions are, it is still preferable to the fact that Ella tends to need to be rescued at most other points in the book.

She does, however, have the Nancy Drew like quality of stumbling on just the place where the bad guys are having a palaver at just the time to hear what she needs to hear to advance the plot.

All in all, I cannot see any reason to compare this book to Tony Hillerman. I will admit though that there are a couple of effective scary moments-- immediately spoiled by Ella's shrill insistance there is no supernatural agents involved. If I was Navaho I might also be offended by the scene where a ritual singer is shot and the whole crowd rushes for their cars without even checking to make sure first aid isn't needed.


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