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Ash Child (Gabriel Du Pre, Bk 9)
Ash Child - Gabriel Du Pre, Bk 9
Author: Peter Bowen
It's dry season in Montana, and fires blazing west of Touissant have spread to the Wolf Mountains. Métis-Indian fiddler, tracker, and reluctant sleuth Gabriel Du Pré suspects the fires have been intentionally set and are linked to the recent murder of Old Maddy Collins, an eccentric woman found in her living room, her head beat...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780312288501
ISBN-10: 0312288506
Publication Date: 4/5/2002
Pages: 256
Rating:
  • Currently 4.2/5 Stars.
 15

4.2 stars, based on 15 ratings
Publisher: St. Martin's Minotaur
Book Type: Hardcover
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

cathyskye avatar reviewed Ash Child (Gabriel Du Pre, Bk 9) on + 2260 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
This is one of my very favorite mystery series. I'd like for it to be one of yours, too, but in order for that to happen, you'll have to check any political correctness you may have at the door before you walk into the Toussaint Saloon to meet with characters that are so fully fleshed you'd swear they were alive. They are also farmers and ranchers, and their language may be a tad saltier than you're used to.

Gabriel Du Pré is a Métis Indian and occasional cattle brand inspector in the wilds of Montana. Nowadays he helps out the local sheriff when he isn't playing some of the best fiddle music you've ever heard in your life. Du Pré is probably more than a little bit different from the characters you're used to reading about:

"I checked you out," said Vook. "Du Pré is a good guy, they say, real good guy, runs on Bull Durham and bourbon and he pisses on the little laws but he's good about the big ones."



Maddy Collins was an old lady who lived on the edge of Toussaint and pretty much kept herself to herself, but everyone in town is upset when her body is found inside her small house. Someone had bashed in her head. Who on earth would want to do something like that to a person who'd never caused harm to another soul? Maddy's death doesn't set well with Du Pré, and he starts looking for the murderer. When he and Madelaine, the lady in his life, find out that drugs might have something to do with the woman's death, they ask an expert what they should be looking for. The expert gives them some things to look for, and--since they live in a small town--they know exactly who's involved.

An old woman's death, drug trafficking in a small Montana town...and then the Wolf Mountains start to burn. Everything Du Pré holds dear, including his own life, is at risk.

Peter Bowen is a master craftsman. The Métis speech patterns, at first strange to the ear, become more familiar with each book until they're completely natural. The independent spirit of all the people living in and around this small town feels familiar. When faced with a problem, they prefer to deal with it themselves. No agencies or government bureaucrats for the people of Toussaint. Even Du Pré's fiddle playing has a life of its own. Bowen's prose are lean and totally evocative of the place and the people of which he writes. There's not an unnecessary scene or phrase to be found.

If you'd like to spend a couple of hours with some real characters taking care of business, if you'd like to get a feel for the real West, you can't go wrong with a Gabriel Du Pré mystery by Peter Bowen.
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cyndij avatar reviewed Ash Child (Gabriel Du Pre, Bk 9) on + 1031 more book reviews
Ninth in the Gabriel duPre series, and probably better for a new reader to start earlier in the series and become more acquainted with the characters. I liked this one, there's more mystery and less political biting at incompetent government, but you still get a bit of that. There's a murder to be solved, of course, and this time it's tied in with the tragedy of drug use in rural communities. As always it's the language and the imagery that really hook the reader. The description of the dry conditions, just waiting for a spark, are very vivid. Again as always there is more than a little touch of the supernatural that allows DuPre to figure it out, although this time it's Madeleine who gets the action. I'm not sure the twist at the end was all that necessary, it seemed to me that what Bowen had already set up would have been enough explanation. But all in all, I enjoyed it. Six more to go in the series.


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