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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Maine fish guide's second outing is atmospheric and pleasingly grisly, April 17, 2007
This review is from: Gray Ghost: A Stoney Calhoun Novel (Stoney Calhoun Mysteries) (Hardcover)
Stoney Calhoun's second appearance (after "Bitch Creek") finds the laconic Maine fishing guide still in love with his business partner, bait shack owner Kate Balaban, and still finding himself - literally.
Calhoun was struck by lightning seven years ago - or so he's been told. His previous life is a blank, but he keeps discovering talents, such as fly-fishing, and French. And more sinister abilities too - a knack for weapons, including his bare hands, and an eye for dangerous detail. "The man in the suit," an occasional visitor, has hinted he shouldn't remember too much.
As the story opens Calhoun embarks on a pre-dawn fishing trip with a new and amiable client, a professor, which ends in the discovery of a charred body on an uninhabited island in Casco Bay.
Then the new client is murdered on Calhoun's front porch. He takes that personally and agrees to help his friend Sheriff Dickman investigate. The charred body is a missing child molester with a roster of people who wanted him dead. But who would want to kill the professor?
The mystery is nicely handled and well paced, but the real pleasure here is Calhoun's character and the Maine outdoors. Calhoun's laid-back stubbornness and relationship with Kate make him both likable and admirable and you can just about smell the crisp Maine air and feel the tug of the fish on your line.
New Hampshire writer Tapply, author of the long-running series featuring Boston lawyer Brady Coyne, has another winner.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A second encounter with Stoney Calhoun, May 6, 2007
This review is from: Gray Ghost: A Stoney Calhoun Novel (Stoney Calhoun Mysteries) (Hardcover)
We first met man-of-mystery and Maine fishing guide Stoney Calhoun in [...] CREEK. There we learned that Stoney didn't always live a slow, simple, and rustic life -- but exactly what he'd done before he was zapped by lightning, only the Man in the Suit knows, and he never reveals much during his occasional visits.
A Gray Ghost is a Maine salmon streamer, a fly that Stoney ties in the outdoor gear shop that he and Kate run. But Stoney also sees a few gray ghosts in human-like form in the area around Quarantine Island, where hundreds of people were once burned to death in a terrible hospital fire. When Stoney and one of his customers find a newly-burned body on that outcropping, they report it to Sheriff Dickman. The county sheriff admires Stoney's obvious investigative prowess so much that he offers to deputize the guide; and this time around, Stoney is glad to help. At first. But after that tourist is also murdered, and Stoney and Dickman find out that the first body belonged to a registered sex offender, our favorite fishing guide begins to have second thoughts about his new, albeit non-paying, duties. How are the two deaths related, anyway? And how can you be objective about the murder of somebody who probably deserved what he got?
And while Stoney steadily mulls over the investigation and who the possible suspects might be, he's also dealing with growing tension in his real job. Kate has toned down their personal relationship, and Stoney's finding it difficult to interact with her on a strictly-business basis. Will they ever get back to the way they were?
Told in a style that reflects not only Stoney's leisurely style of thinking, but also the pace of rural life in Maine ("The Way Life Should Be"), GRAY GHOST is an excellent stand-alone follow-up to [...] CREEK. In any event, you gotta admire someone who owns a Brittany spaniel named Ralph Waldo Emerson.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
A good read, December 5, 2007
This review is from: Gray Ghost: A Stoney Calhoun Novel (Stoney Calhoun Mysteries) (Hardcover)
First Sentence: The alarm in Stoney Calhoun's head jangled at two fifty-five, five minutes before the redundant wind-up clock beside his bed was scheduled to go off. Calhoun's internal alarm hadn't failed him yet, but he still didn't quite trust it.
Stoney Calhoun remembers nothing prior to seven years ago when he was apparently struck by lightening. However, he is content with his life living in a cabin on a creek in Maine, partners in a fishing shop, in love with his married partner, and conducting fishing trips. Things turn grim when he guides a fishing trip and, when they take a break on an uninhabited island, find the corpse of a man burned beyond recognition. After the man who hired him is found dead on Stoney's porch, he is deputized to help find the killer.
I'll admit I'm a sucker for books set in Maine and I even enjoy the fishing theme. Stoney is an interesting character who is constantly discovering skills he didn't know he had. I do find it hard to believe that someone who'd lost their memory wouldn't want to know about their past.
As a plot device, the memory loss, the relationship with his married partner, and the character's constant use of the word "ain't" could become old if they go on too long. However, Tapply definitely knows how to create characters and sense of place. The story is well plotted and I couldn't anticipate where it was going.
I shall be interested to see where this series is going.
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