A satisfying read for me because the tale captures some of the types of characters in my neck of the woods in rural Maine and advances the series hero, game warden Mike Bowditch, into a more mature persona. In previous installments, he was always blatantly risking his job while investigating cases that belong to the police and having inappropriate affairs with women involved with his cases. Here, he learns to do his investigations with more subtlety and merely pines for a love interest engaged to someone else. Thus, he becomes more likeable and deserving of empathy when he gets in trouble.
The main focus of the story concerns the antagonism from many quarters to the formation of a national park out vast tracts of Maine woods, which is a real hot-button political issue. Instead of a cosmetics executive who is buying up forest land under such a plan, the fictional story here makes her a herbal product magnate named Betty Morse. It also moves the planned park from the north woods to far eastern Maine, Washington County.
Bowditch gets called to this character’s estate in the boonies where the illegal slaughter of multiple moose appears to represent a threat to her. There are many suspects, as such a park would represent a loss of livelihood for people involved with forestry, wood products industries, hunting and fishing guides, and secondary businesses that depend on this form of tourism. When the scare tactics end up getting someone killed, the stakes get raised to a high-pressure case of national proportions. While law enforcement and Bowditch’s boss face the political heat, Mike and a friend of his who gets fired as Morse’s property manager pursue their own leads. This time around it’s his friend who shakes the dangerous ogres out of the trees.
Doiron is getting better with fleshing out his characters, devious plotting, and touches of humor. He does go a bit overboard on the ignorant rednecks, survivalists, and gunned-up, reclusive conservatives. At least he makes the sheriff a lesbian, and acknowledges a truth I’ve noticed: "As parochial as Washington County could seem at times, its people showed frequent outbursts of open mindedness."
My rating is rounded up from 3.5 stars as the reading pleasure is not quite at the level of the 4 star reads I get from most of C.J. Box’s series with Wyoming game warden Joe Pickett or some of Nevada Barr’s novels featuring park ranger Anna Pigeon. The common aspect to the three authors is their creation of crime or murder scenarios in the context of nature and the conflict between factions dedicated to either preserving or exploited natural resources.
This book was provided to me by the published through the Goodreads Giveaway program.