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Margaret Coel is the New York Times bestselling author of sixteen novels, most recently The Spider’s Web. Her acclaimed Wind River mystery series is set among the Arapahos of Wyoming’s Wind River Reservation and features Jesuit priest Father John O’Malley and Arapaho attorney Vicky Holden. Find out more at www.margaretcoel.com.
Vermilion Drift, William Kent Krueger’s powerful and multi-layered new novel, arrived in my mailbox just as I returned from a vacation in Minnesota’s North Country. From the opening pages, I was back among the forests that go on forever, "capped with clouds and dripping with rainwater," and lakes that mirror the sunsets, studded with white sailboats floating across the horizon. A "melting pot of humanity," Krueger calls the North Country, where faces of the people reflect the distant lands their ancestors left behind for a future working the great mines of the Iron Range. The towns are small and some are dying, but the people are strong and resilient. Nearby is the reservation of the Ojibwes, who claimed the North Country before everyone else arrived.
The complex and engaging Cork O’Connor knows this country by heart. He belongs here. The wooded hills and lakes and open mines bleeding iron are kneaded into his DNA. Part Ojibwe, part Irish, he is what the Arapahos would call one of the "edge people," someone who dwells between two different cultures, moves freely back and forth, and explains one to the other. Once the Tamarack County sheriff, Cork is now a private investigator, mourning the loss of his beloved wife, Jo, and coming to terms with a new phase of life in which his children, grown and on their own, no longer need him. Groping toward a future he can’t quite see, Cork takes on a case that plunges him into the past and forces him to confront the history of his own family.
The Vermilion One Mine, long closed, has become the target of the Department of Energy as a possible storage place for nuclear wastes. Which has set the folks in the North Country at odds with the mine owners. Cork’s heart lies with the Ojibwes leading protests against the further defilement of Grandmother Earth. But when three officials receive notes in blood-red type that say,"We die. U die," he agrees to head up the mine’s security. There is another problem the owner, Max Cavanaugh, asks Cork to handle discretely. Locate his sister, Lauren Cavanaugh, who seems to have disappeared, although the wealthy and philanthropic Lauren has a way of wandering off to places like Paris or New York without bothering to tell anyone.
Cork’s initial fear that Lauren’s disappearance might be related to the heated protests outside the mine’s gates seems confirmed when her body is found in a sealed room inside a tunnel, or drift, deep in the Vermilion One Mine. Buried in the grisly grave alongside the body of Lauren Cavanaugh are the skeletal remains of five other females. Four are Ojibwe girls who had gone missing forty years ago in what is still remembered as "the vanishings." Cork was thirteen years old then, and the horror of the missing girls remains etched in his memory. The fifth victim is Monique Cavanaugh, mother to Max and Lauren, a mercurial woman who had also gone missing then. Cork’s late father was the sheriff at the time. Not only had he failed to find the bodies and solve the murders, it turns out that his gun had been used to kill Monique. Forty years later, the same gun was turned on her daughter.
Now Cork is drawn into an investigation as deep and dark as the mines in the Iron Range as he tries to unravel the connections between homicides separated by four decades. Wherever he turns, he confronts the specters of his own past and the roles his father and he—a thirteen year old boy—may have played in the earlier murders. For most of his life, Cork has enjoyed the kind of peace that comes from forgetting, but it is a peace that sat roughly on his shoulders and fed his nightmares. Before he can figure out why someone wanted Lauren Cavanaugh dead, he knows he must figure out what happened in the past. He also knows that the only way to enter into the past is through memory, and that is the riveting journey Cork embarks upon.
Krueger has written a deceptively intricate novel of suspense and mystery that transcends the mystery genre and, at the same time, grips the reader from the opening pages. He doesn’t flinch from such important themes as the nature of evil and the imperative to stop evil from infecting an entire community. At the heart of Vermilion Drift he plants ideas of justice, and the way justice demands to be served, as well as the idea of reconciliation--between past and present, Ojibwe and white, a son and the memory of his father. The past that Cork uncovers is haunting and tragic, but it is a past that, at long last, can be understood and forgiven.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
27 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
My First Time With Cork - Won't Be The Last,
By
This review is from: Vermilion Drift: A Novel (Hardcover)
This is my first Cork O'Connor read - it is the 10th in a series - I'm a little late to the party - so I am reviewing it not in comparison to the others in the series, but as a stand on it's own mystery. Although there were times that I would have liked to have read the earlier books - especially the one before this one,"Heaven's Keep" which is apparently the one where he faces a personal tragedy, leaving Cork almost certainly a different man - I did not feel lost at any time during the read of this story. Author William Kent Krueger does a fine job of filling in details of the past while continually moving this intriguing mystery forward.
So Cork O'Connor,once the Sheriff of Tamarack County,Minnesota is now working on his own as a Private Investigator. He is hired to find the missing sister of a wealthy Iron Mine owner.The sister is a free spirit who often takes off when it pleases her and also is the owner of an Artist Colony at a sprawling estate that has seen some horrible crimes over the decades.The brother who has always taken care of his sister is more than a little worried this time. At the same time, the Department of Energy has decided that the iron mines might just be a good place to store Nuclear Waste. The inhabitants of the county - including Ojibwe Indians that live just outside the mine area - are up in arms. It's bad enough the mining is going on, raping the land, but now Nuclear waste in their back yard as well? Things get pretty heated and some very scary messages are being found that sound like they could be fatal threats to anyone invovled with this would-be disaster to the neighborhood. So Cork is doing double duty now, working on locating Lauren Cavanaugh and investigating the threats as well as providing some protection for the reciepients of them. The story takes many twists and turns(a mystery lover's delight)as the disappearnce of Lauren has shades of "The Vanishings" - a more then 40 year-old unsolved case that had the county searching for missing Ojibwe girls. Cork, 12 at the time, flashes back on the case that his father as Sheriff worked on back then. But something's missing in his memory and he can't quite make the connection. Cork is part Ojibwe himself and is also torn between his loyalties and beliefs, and working for the mine owner and the law. Working with the Sheriff's dept, but investigating on his own, his journey becomes a meld of two cultures.We as the reader get to follow him on his path of awakening to find the missing pieces of both the current crime he must solve and his past. William Kent Krueger has wonderfully incorporated the mystique and culture of the Ojibwe people with dark secrets and a deadly mystery buried deep - both literally and figuratively. To be honest during the first part of the story I was thinking Joe Leaphorn meets Lucas Davenport,but Cork O'Connor is definitely his own man. The further I got into this book, the harder time I had putting it down. Wonderfully colorful characters,a very likable leading man, detailed descriptions that put me right there in that dark and deep mine,an unpredictable,suspenseful heart pumping mystery(can't tell you how many times I guessed wrong),and a chance to spend some time with the Ojibwe People and learn some of their culture made for one captivating read. Does it stand on it's own? - You Betcha! - But I know now that I will be spending some more time with Cork O'Conner - just think I have 9 more stories to catch up on! 5 stars for getting me hooked(happily) on another series- "Migwech", Mr. Krueger. Enjoy the read.....Laurie also recommended:Beyond the Great Snow Mountains (Mass Market Paperback)
19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
"I was pure as the driven snow, but then I drifted." Mae West,
By
This review is from: Vermilion Drift: A Novel (Hardcover)
Former shefiff of Aurora, Minnesota, Cork O'Connor is hired to look for Lauren Cavanaugh by her brother, Max.
Max is the owner of the Great Northern Mining Company. The Vermilion Drift is one of their deepest mines. Now it is being considered as a dumping site for nuclear waste. Since this would have a major effect on the Ojibwe Indian reservation, many of the Native Americans feel that they are being sold out once again and there are heated protests about the possibility of using the mine in that manner. After meeting with other mine officials, Max asks Cork to look at something in Vermilion One. They enter the mine and find a note spray pained on the wall, "We die, you die." Since no one saw the person who did the spray painting enter the mine, Cork believes that there must be a second enterance. While he is searching for this, deep in the mine, he finds a room with six bodies. Five of the bodies have been there for many years but one has recently been placed there. This reminds Cork of The Vanishings. In 1964, when Cork was a young teenager, two native American teenage girls vanished. Then a rich white woman also disappeared, this was Monique Cavanaugh, Lauren and Max's mother. In a story deep with Indian folk lore, Cork speaks to his ancient friend, Henry Meloux. Despite advanced age, Henry is a wise man and can sense things. He tells Cork that he knows that things are stirred up on the res and tells Cork who to speak to in order to identify the other two bodies found in the mine. It is interesting that Cork's father was the sheriff in Aurora when these events were happening and Cork faces a moral dilemma in considering if his father could have been involved. As always with William Kent Krueger, there are details about the Ojibwe culture and beliefs. Cork is a well described and likable character who the reader will want to succeed in his quest. The story is told as if was pieces of a menu that is eventually laid out for the reader to learn and be entertained by the realistic and dramatic detail. Very enjoyable story and would have been a five star but for some of the questions in the plot that were too conveniently answered.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
strong regional mystery,
This review is from: Vermilion Drift: A Novel (Hardcover)
Mining heir Max Cavanagh hires Tamarack County, Minnesota private investigator Cork O'Connor to find his missing sister, Lauren. She established an artists' retreat so Cork starts there. He also looks into who is threatening people involved in the Cavanagh Vermilion One mine that U.S. Department of Energy evaluates as a potential nuclear waste storage site.
Cork and a mine official descend into the Vermilion One mine where they find five skeletons and a fresh corpse. The quintet is probably the remains of the 1964 "the Vanishings" that Cork's father Liam as county sheriff unsuccessfully investigated. The sixth body buried in the mine for about a week is that of a well-dressed woman, who Cork assumes is Lauren. The tenth Cork Minnesota investigative thriller (see Red Knife and Heaven's Keep) is a terrific whodunit as a homicidal cold case of the hero's father merges with a present day murder. The whodunit is well written hooking the readers early on with trying to find the connection between the deaths over four decades apart. With a bit of Native American mysticism enhancing the plot, fans will appreciate this strong regional mystery. Harriet Klausner
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