Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Elderly tracker aids hunted woman in ‘Fox Creek’

- By Bruce Desilva

As usual in a Krueger novel, the prose is elegant, the landscape of Minnesota’s northeaste­rn triangle is vividly portrayed, and the character developmen­t is superb.

Retired sheriff and parttime private detective Cork O’connor is working the grill in his Aurora, Minnesota, restaurant when a

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stranger wanders in looking for help finding his wife, Delores, who has run off to have an affair with a Native American named Henry Meloux.

Cork agrees to lend a hand, but he sneaks a photo of the stranger because he knows the story is hooey. Fans of William Kent Krueger’s fine series featuring Cork, now in its 19th installmen­t, know it’s hooey too. After all, Henry, an Ojibwe healer who’s a regular in these novels, is at least 100 years old.

Cork rushes to Henry’s camp at the edge of the Boundary Waters wilderness and finds that Delores is indeed there. She came seeking Henry’s help with her troubled marriage and with her newfound interest in her Indigenous heritage. There, she’s in the process of getting a cleansing sweat under the guidance of Henry’s great niece Rainy, who is also Cork’s wife.

Dolores confirms that the man in the photo is not her husband, who has mysterious­ly disappeare­d, it seems. So, Cork heads back to Aurora to try to figure out what’s going on. Not long after, Henry senses imminent danger and leads Dolores and Rainy into the wilderness of deep woods and marshes.

When Cork returns to the camp, he finds signs that others have searched the place and that Dolores, Henry and Rainy are being tracked and hunted, so he heads into the wilderness to track the hunters.

For more than 300 pages, Krueger keeps shifting points of view. We follow Henry as he uses a century of experience as a woodsman to evade the men who are tracking them. We follow a team of mercenarie­s who are determined to find them, led by a skilled Native American tracker of their own. And we follow Cork, who grows increasing­ly fearful that he lacks the skill to save Dolores, Henry and Rainy. It soon becomes evident that not everyone will survive the ordeal in one piece.

Why the mercenarie­s are hunting Dolores, and how her missing husband figures into the story, remains a mystery until Krueger delivers an unexpected twist at the very end.

As usual in a Krueger novel, the prose is elegant, the landscape of Minnesota’s northeaste­rn triangle is vividly portrayed, the character developmen­t is superb, and Henry’s Native American mysticism is treated with understand­ing and respect.

 ?? ?? “Fox Creek” by William Kent Krueger (Atria, $23.99)
“Fox Creek” by William Kent Krueger (Atria, $23.99)

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