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High Lonesome Road

High Lonesome Road

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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent mystery with great characters
Review: Erica Hill could get on your nerves. She certainly got on victim advocate Chloe Newcombe's nerves and, when Erica suggested getting together, Chloe made it a point not to call her. Two weeks later, Erica was dead and Chloe felt responsible. Her responsibility grew when the local police named Erica's precious son as a suspect.

The more Chloe investigated the case, the more she found that Erica had been to bed with just about every man she met. Yet, until recently, Erica had loved them and left them. Suddenly, about the time she'd contacted Chloe, she'd also contacted many of her former acquaintences looking for something. Like Chloe, however, few of them had bothered to listen. Except maybe someone had. Chloe can't believe that the murder is a coincidence. It has to be connected with whatever Erica was looking for.

Betsy Thornton has written a small gem of a mystery here. Her characters are well developed with both flaws and virtues that make the reader concerned for their safety and success. Her occasional use of poetic language is actually useful. I especially enjoyed her description of Arizona where old cowboys and aging hippies live side-by-side but in complete misunderstanding of one another.

As a mystery, HIGH LONESOME ROAD is one of the best I've read this year. Thornton disguises her red herrings well enough that even an experienced mystery reader will be confused.

I very much enjoyed this fine novel.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Betsy Thornton ought to be better known than she is
Review: I recently discovered Thornton's books and think she deserves a lot more attention as a writer than she gets. She has a wonderful ability to create a sense of place and populate that place with memorable, three dimensional characters. She's not one of those writers were you have trouble keeping track of who is who because you quickly get to know each of the characters and they stand out as unique individuals with their own personalities.

Thornton's mysteries are set in Old Dudley, an old mining town near the Mexican border of Arizona. Old Dudley has become sort of an artist's colony, although New Dudley is where the long-time residents of the area live. Chloe Newcombe, Thornton's "detective," is a Victim's Advocate who lives in Old Dudley. Her job brings her into contact with murders and the people who have been touched by violence. In this mystery, the victim is an old friend (aging hippy) from her Venice Beach days, a good friend of her deceased brother whom she has lost contact with until shortly before the murder. Because of that relationship, she finds herself getting involved in trying to prove that the woman's son was not the killer.

Thornton's books are relatively short (no 600 page blockbusters) but each scene, each sentence helps paint a fascinating desert landscape populated by aging hippies, aging rodeo riders, hard-bitten sheriffs, artists, and small town civil servants. I would love to go to the area she describes (think Tony Hillerman landscaping here) and find it hard to believe that I wouldn't find Old Dudley and Chloe Newcombe and her cat Big Foot.

I highly recommend this author in general and this book in particular.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Another winning mystery for this talented author
Review: Two years ago, Chloe Newcomb left New York to relocate to Dudley, Arizona. Chloe inherited a home in the Old Dudley section of town from her deceased sibling's gay lover, who was like a big brother to her too. Chloe works a part-time schedule as a victim's counselor for the local police department. She not only helps individuals cope with crime, but also teaches classes.

Attending one of her classes is Erica Hill, a former neighbor of her brother in Venice, California. They agree to talk about old times, but Chloe never called. Chloe comes across old letters from her sibling that includes a comment wondering what happened to Erica. The next day, Chloe arrives at the murder scene of the bookmobile driver to provide comfort to retired schoolteacher Dot Stone, who discovered the corpse. To Chloe's shock, the body is Erica. Unable to mind her business, especially after rereading her brother's old letter, Chloe needs to know what happened to Erica, why it happened and what will happen to her teenage son?

As with her debut novel THE COWBOY RIDES AGAIN, Betsy Thornton provides readers with a deep feel for the smaller Southwest communities. Entities like bookmobiles make it seem like the 1950s to this aging urban boomer. The story line is entertaining and the characters appear genuine due to the secondary cast's interactions with Chloe. Ms. Thornton escorts her audience down the HIGH LONESOME ROAD with a strong regional cozy.

Harriet Klausner


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