From Publishers Weekly
The idea of the big city cop who accidentally kills his partner and then shakes up his life by going back to his rural hometown receives fresh treatment in Bredes's suspense series featuring Hector Bellevance, a Harvard graduate who was a detective in the Boston police department before tragedy overtook him. In Bellevance's poignant second outing (after 2001's Cold Comfort), the author deepens an already original character, who has returned home to Tipton, Vt., where he works as town constable, grows vegetables for tourists and dates local reporter Wilma Strong. When Marcel Boisvert, a Tipton power broker, apparently goes berserk and murders two public officials, Bellevance and Wilma find all sorts of local secrets under various Vermont rocks. Though the novel is based on an actual 1997 case, Bredes manages to add a sizable amount of fictional flourish with impressive results. Agent, Howard Morhaim. (May 3)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Review
“Don Bredes is a writer whose work I’ve admired for many years, but I was especially taken with The Fifth Season, the work of a singular talent at the height of his powers. . . . This is a brisk and well-shaped story of crime and detection; yet it’s more than that. It’s also a work of considerable literary ambition and solid achievement, one that deserves a wide audience.” —Jay Parini, author of The Apprentice Lover
“From its appealingly reluctant sleuth-hero, Hector Bellevance, to its precise and lovely language, to its terrifying climax in a quiet Vermont town, The Fifth Season is the most surprising, original, and entertaining literary thriller I've read since James Lee Burke's Purple Cane Road.” —Howard Frank Mosher, author of A Stranger in the Kingdom
From the Trade Paperback edition.
“From its appealingly reluctant sleuth-hero, Hector Bellevance, to its precise and lovely language, to its terrifying climax in a quiet Vermont town, The Fifth Season is the most surprising, original, and entertaining literary thriller I've read since James Lee Burke's Purple Cane Road.” —Howard Frank Mosher, author of A Stranger in the Kingdom
From the Trade Paperback edition.

