Like millions of other readers, I first encountered Tony Hillerman in his Leaphorn and Chee mysteries. A master of characterization, intricate, twisty plots, and lush depictions of place, I had fallen in love with his Southwest and gained a much deeper understanding of the Native American cultures that coexisted there. Could those gifts be transplanted to a place outside American borders?
In "Finding Moon," Hillerman shows that the answer is a definite yes.
Malcolm "Moon" begins his story as a small-town newspaper editor in Colorado. His younger brother Ricky dies in a helicopter crash in Vietnam, where he has been operating an air cargo company. He leaves behind a daughter. Malcolm's mother, Victoria, sets out on a journey to bring the child to America, but she never makes it, suffering a heart attack in the airport that lands her in intensive care, awaiting bypass surgery. This leaves Moon to deal with his mother's illness, followed by his own trip to southeast Asia. Set in the spring of 1975, Moon lands in the final chaotic days of the Vietnamese conflict, the Khmer Rouge's rise to power in Cambodia, and the desperate flood of refugees trying to escape before there is no way out.
Along the way, Moon is talked into helping an old man search for his family's ancestral bones, and a Dutch-Indonesian woman seeks his assistance to rescue her brother, a Christian missionary in the mountains of Vietnam.
Hillerman keeps all these plot strands singing along, intersecting and tying themselves into a satisfyingly tricky knot. The suspense builds, the emotional stakes continue to rise, and what started out as a story about a man searching for other people and things becomes the tale of how he discovers his true self.
Hillerman's insightful comments on the conflicting attitudes of Vietnamese, Cambodian, Thai, Laosian, and Chinese, as well as his honest portrayals of the misguided American efforts in the region, are well worth the experience of reading this book. The conflict might have ended over thirty years ago, but humankind's ability to make the same mistakes in different locations is incredible.