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Book Cover for: Hoodoo, Susan Cummins Miller

Hoodoo

Susan Cummins Miller

Finalist:WILLA Literary Award -Contemporary Fiction (2009)
Third Place:IndieFab awards -Mystery-Fiction (2008)
Southeastern Arizona is a tinderbox. Down Under Copper's plans to explore for minerals pit landowners, worried about their water supply and land values, against those hoping to profit from the mining venture. Someone snaps. In the traditional homeland of the Chiricahua Apaches, an environmental lawyer's body lies in the burned wreckage of his trailer. As if in retaliation, a DUC executive is shot. Geologist Frankie MacFarlane, her students, and Joaquin Black, an old friend and local rancher, find the executive's body in a clearing among the volcanic hoodoos of Chiricahua National Monument. And that night, near Paradise, on the eastern side of the mountain range, someone kills an ethnobotanist--a walker and puzzle maker who hasn't spoken in years. When Frankie, Joaquin, and Joaquin's brother Raul become suspects in the murders, Frankie must decipher interlocking puzzles to clear their names and to find the killer--or killers--before they strike again. In the process, she discovers that, contrary to geologic principles, the past is the key to the present. Miller weaves together geoscience, Western history and culture, ecology, family, and place into a compelling puzzle mystery narrated in Frankie MacFarlane's unique voice.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Texas Tech University Press
  • Publish Date: Apr 15th, 2008
  • Pages: 292
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 8.80in - 5.92in - 1.05in - 1.13lb
  • EAN: 9780896726239
  • Categories: Mystery & Detective - Women Sleuths

About the Author

Miller, Susan Cummins: - Susan Cummins Miller, a former field geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey and college instructor, is a research affiliate and SIROW Scholar with the University of Arizona's Southwest Institute for Research on Women. In addition to the Frankie MacFarlane mysteries, she is the editor of A Sweet, Separate Intimacy: Women Writers of the American Frontier, 1800-1922 (TTUP, 2007). She lives in Tucson.

Praise for this book

"A rollicking pentimento of fieldwork gone afoul!" -- Geotimes "Geotimes"
"Assured and erudite." -- Publishers Weekly "Publishers Weekly"