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Rating: Summary: COYOTE REVENGE IS REALLY OK Review: As a mystery author with my debut novel in its initial release within this culture that worships youth, I suppose I should not reveal my age by admitting I actually once wore a presidential campaign button for the author of this mystery. I would've voted for him too, save for the fact that Fred Harris dropped out of the race long before the California primary. He would've gotten my first ever vote (see, I'm not THAT ancient!), but now I get to vote strongly in favor of his first mystery novel. COYOTE REVENGE is set in Oklahoma during the Depression. Times are tough for everyone, especially Hoyt and Inez Ready. Someone shoots them and then burns down their home. Two years later, the mystery is still unsolved when their son, Dub, dies under dubious circumstances. Dub Ready was sheriff, and the sheriff's job then goes to Okie Dunn, a friend of Dub's who recently returned home after dropping out of law school. Okie begins to investigate the deaths, and the investigation produces some interesting answers. Fred Harris has written a terrific historical mystery here, and it captures its time and place perfectly. I would expect nothing less from a man I still think would have made an excellent president.
Rating: Summary: Looking back with humor and affection Review: As an author who loves small towns...I felt right at home with Fred Harris's first Okie Dunn novel, "Coyote Revenge." It was like finding a wildflower pressed in an old Bible, or a photograph in a shoebox at the back of the closet."Coyote Revenge" was reviewed in the New York Times under Crime Fiction, but the mystery is pretty thin. Who killed the old sheriff? There aren't many suspects, so take your pick. The protagonist, Okie Dunn, is the new sheriff, but there's so little violence and so much examination of personal relationships that I'm tempted to call it a cozy. Police procedures in that time and place consist of shipping a gun off the State Crime Bureau by Mistletoe Express. "Coyote Revenge" is a small, scrumptious slice of American life in the 1930s. Harris sets his novel in a fictional version of the little southwestern Oklahoma town of Walters. That's where he grew up, and where I was living at about the same time, so I know the territory well. The story is simple. Okie Dunn is suspended from law school at the University of Oklahoma for decking a professor. He goes home, where his father is dying of lung cancer, and gets work as a cattle trader. When the sheriff, a boyhood buddy, is murdered, Okie pins on the star and sets out to discover "whodunit." Harris has perfect pitch when it comes to the way we talked back then and there (and still do sometimes). His dialogue is a flawless rendering of what may seem like a foreign language to some readers. His description of the home cooking of that day will ring bells with anyone who grew up on either side of the Red River in the first half of the 20th century. Example: "Most of Mama's recipes, if she'd ever written them down, would have probably started out with: 'First, get the grease hot.' All the meat we ate -- home-cured ham and sausage, newly killed chicken, a meat-locker steak -- was salted with a heavy hand and then fried nearly stiff. She salted and fried potatoes and mealed-okra, too, in plenty of lard. And Mama's string beans or a mess of greens always went into the pot with a good dose of bacon drippings that she'd saved in a tin can on top of the stove. Then, salted generously, too, they were boiled to kingdom come." If you want an honest look at life in rural Oklahoma during the bleak years of the Great Depression, in a story told with humor and affection, this is your book...
Rating: Summary: Coyote Revenge Review: o/~ "Many months have come and gone since I wandered from my home in the Oklahoma hills where I was born... Way down yonder in the Indian Nation, I rode my pony on the reservation, in the Oklahoma hills where I was born .." o/~ (that's Woody Guthrie singing about Eastern Oklahoma.) In prose resonate of the era, Fred Harris, formerly of the western Oklahoma prairie, and former U.S. Senator, has created a sheriff/sleuth that Sooners can be proud of. This is also a tale of those who stuck out the Depression in Oklahoma while the Joads went to harvest "The Grapes of Wrath" in California. I only have one question: Whatever happened to Progess Beer?
Rating: Summary: Terrific period mystery Review: One of the most impressive things about this book is the period detail; set in the Depression, it convincingly captures a way of life unique to Southwest Oklahoma. There is wisdom, poverty, strength of character, humor, prejudice, and even a nice little mystery story woven in. The only reason I didn't rate the book 5 stars was because of the mystery itself, which I think suffered because of the book's compact length. With too few red herrings, the short list of suspects made the "whodunit" aspect a little too easy. Still, a very enjoyable read, and I will be reading the sequel soon.
Rating: Summary: Terrific period mystery Review: One of the most impressive things about this book is the period detail; set in the Depression, it convincingly captures a way of life unique to Southwest Oklahoma. There is wisdom, poverty, strength of character, humor, prejudice, and even a nice little mystery story woven in. The only reason I didn't rate the book 5 stars was because of the mystery itself, which I think suffered because of the book's compact length. With too few red herrings, the short list of suspects made the "whodunit" aspect a little too easy. Still, a very enjoyable read, and I will be reading the sequel soon.
Rating: Summary: The Way It Was Review: Yes, this book is written by THE Fred R. Harris. You old timers will remember his as the Oklahoma boy born during the Depression in Walters, OK. You know, the one that went on to graduate from OU law school and serve in the State senate for eight years and the U.S. Senate for nine years. The same guy that ran unsuccessfully for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1976. Maybe you have read some of his seventeen authored or co-authored books on political science or social issues. If you happen to be one of those young whipper-snappers that don't remember Harris but are kind of interested, you are in luck. Coyote Revenge is Harris'first historical fiction mystery novel and it is a real keeper. The story is set in rural southwestern Oklahoma in the mid-1930's and is replete with characters that you will swear are right out of Walters, OK. They are all here: ranchers, farmers, Indians, small towns bankers and some womern you will never forget. In addition, there are multiple murders and a suicide that keeps the story moving along with humor, suspense, tragedy, decency, and tenderness that is as authentic as it is moving. Harris is true to his roots in the description and dialogue of the characters and events in the Depression era small town in Oklahoma. I have read a number of scholarly works on the "okies" of the dust bowl ear and Harris has the scene down pat. From the dislike of Hoover to the revering of Roosevelt, where "Hudge" Dunn, father of the principal character "Okie", states "When Roosevelt took his seat in '33 we commenced to climb, and we clumb!" From the placing of a "ten pound" card in the window for the ice man and the unforgettable taste of a NeHi soda on a hot, dry Oklahoma summer day to the pie suppers and share cropping struggles, its all here in dust-bowl dialect and faithful detail. It is apparent Harris never forgot his roots. If you are looking for a good mystery story with the added bonus of a true description of life in rural Oklahoma during the Depression, get this book. As some would say about Fred Harris, "He done good."
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