16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A tragedy, not a mystery, May 9, 2002
The conclusion of *Coyote Waits* is the most powerful and affecting of all Hillerman's "Navajo mysteries." Leaphorn has his monsters to slay: alcoholism, superstition. They come together here in a complex mystery that begins with Jim Chee botching a crime scene and lead from there through a maze of deception and misdirection. When we emerge into the sunlight, the truth is heartbreaking.
For my money, the sentimental best of the series. *A Thief of Time* may be better writing and plotting, and *Skinwalkers* may have the best suspense, but this is the story that will stay with you for days and return to haunt you when you see your next drunken Indian dozing away despair in tenement shade.
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16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Deserving of accolades, April 6, 1998
Right from the moment where a car fire on a dirt road announces trouble with a capital "T," I enjoyed "Coyote Waits" a lot. Hillerman's pace is measured but not sleep-inducing. It was fascinating to see two policemen work in different ways to solve the same crime. The story would
would have been memorable for that reason alone, but Tony Hillerman isn't
past president of Mystery Writers of America for nothing. As usual
with this author, well-informed asides about Navajo culture and mythology
advance the plot and bring characters to life. Thunderheads and Reservation
landmarks are described in language as spare and beautiful as the land itself.
Even small scenes are expertly drawn. When an old man looks at the floor,
we know precisely why. When people talk in a crowded elevator, their
words, actions, and feelings have perfect pitch. The end result is not just a mystery,
but also a crackerjack police procedural and a poignant meditation
on the nature of friendship.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Coyote is always waiting...wherever you least expect him, August 10, 1998
One never knows where evil will come from and that is why one must always be on guard or so it seems when you read Tony Hillermans novel "Coyote Waits". It is the authors message that if you seek to do something of an evil nature Coyote is sure to make a meal out of you.
I enjoyed this book. Not until the very last had I suspected that a simpe inoccent act of love could develop into something tragic
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