The Commercial Appeal

Paul Doiron cranks up a suspensefu­l, fast-paced plot

- Bruce Desilva

“One Last Lie” by Paul Doiron (Minotaur)

Fifteen years ago, a young Maine game warden went undercover to investigat­e a poaching ring in Maine’s north woods and was never heard from again; so his mentor, retired warden Charlie Stevens, is stunned when he stumbles onto the missing man’s badge being offered for sale at a flea market.

The discovery, Charlie realizes, means everything he had believed about his young friend’s disappeara­nce and presumed death was wrong. Determined to solve the mystery, he rushes home, packs a bag, tells his wife not to ask any questions, and urges her not to let anyone – especially his friend Mike Bowditch – try to find him. But Charlie is like a father to Mike, so the latter, a game warden himself, sets off to track Charlie down.

So begins “One Last Lie,” the eleventh novel in Paul Doiron’s fine series of Mike Bowditch crime novels.

Mike and Charlie’s dual investigat­ions lead them on a dangerous journey through forests and ramshackle riverside towns along the Maine-canadian border. Gradually, Mike discovers that Charlie, as well as several men in positions of power in the warden service, have been harboring secrets about what happened 15 years ago – and at least one of them is willing to kill to prevent the truth from surfacing.

This novel is something of a departure for Doiron. The lyrical descriptio­ns of the natural world that have distinguis­hed his previous novels are less in evidence this time, and the suspensefu­l, fast-paced plot has more twists and turns than usual in a Mike Bowditch novel.

Meanwhile, Charlie’s daughter, Stacey, Mike’s first true love, resurfaces, complicati­ng Mike’s relationsh­ip with fellow warden Dani Tate.

The last chapter warns that Mike’s always tumultuous love life may be headed for more trouble in the next installmen­t of the Mike Bowditch saga.

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