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In Rhino We Trust: A Jenny Willson Mystery (A Jenny Willson Mystery, 3) Paperback – October 22, 2019
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Dave Butler
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Dave Butler
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Print length328 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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PublisherDundurn
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Publication dateOctober 22, 2019
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Dimensions5 x 1.3 x 8 inches
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ISBN-101459740874
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ISBN-13978-1459740877
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Editorial Reviews
Review
Butler’s writing keeps getting stronger...This is a very good entry in a series that one hopes will continue for many years. ― Booklist
Readers will want to see more of this appealing heroine. ― Publishers Weekly
Butler will pull you inside the world of anti-poaching and into the precarious edge of the Namibian wilderness. His descriptions of the landscape, the people who live there, the wildlife, the dust, the beauty, the politics and the heartbreak, make his latest book a winner and a must read for any wildlife enthusiast. ― Brian Keating, creator of Going Wild
Butler’s strong debut shows a powerful heroine determined to bring a nasty but fully fleshed-out set of baddies to justice. ― Kirkus Reviews, for Full Curl
Dave Butler takes it up a more than a couple notches with this exceptionally suspenseful and well-researched mystery tale that sees Jenny Willson back in action this time alongside a stellar team of colleagues in Namibia working to save one of the last populations of truly wild black rhinos. In Rhino We Trust is a testament not only to Namibia’s unconventional collaborative efforts to combat rhino poaching ― which includes numerous female champions ― but also highlights the realities rangers face when confronted by the complex and creepy underworld of illegal wildlife trafficking. ― Jeff Muntifering, conservation biologist
Readers will want to see more of this appealing heroine. ― Publishers Weekly
Butler will pull you inside the world of anti-poaching and into the precarious edge of the Namibian wilderness. His descriptions of the landscape, the people who live there, the wildlife, the dust, the beauty, the politics and the heartbreak, make his latest book a winner and a must read for any wildlife enthusiast. ― Brian Keating, creator of Going Wild
Butler’s strong debut shows a powerful heroine determined to bring a nasty but fully fleshed-out set of baddies to justice. ― Kirkus Reviews, for Full Curl
Dave Butler takes it up a more than a couple notches with this exceptionally suspenseful and well-researched mystery tale that sees Jenny Willson back in action this time alongside a stellar team of colleagues in Namibia working to save one of the last populations of truly wild black rhinos. In Rhino We Trust is a testament not only to Namibia’s unconventional collaborative efforts to combat rhino poaching ― which includes numerous female champions ― but also highlights the realities rangers face when confronted by the complex and creepy underworld of illegal wildlife trafficking. ― Jeff Muntifering, conservation biologist
About the Author
Dave Butler is an author, photographer, forester, biologist, and a Royal Canadian Geographical Society Fellow. His first Jenny Willson Mystery, Full Curl, won the Arthur Ellis Best First Crime Novel Award. He lives in Cranbrook, B.C.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Chapter 1
May 24
Sam Mogotsi climbed to the top of a ridge, slowly, quietly. The dry, crystalline soil crunched beneath his boots. It was midday and the sun was high and hot, sucking the moisture from his skin. Since leaving his remote house at dawn, he had been driving and walking for more than five hours and was keen to be home by the time his two boys returned from school. After checking the ground for snakes and scorpions, he lowered himself and sat in the limited shade of a large boulder, his back against the rust-coloured sandstone. He could feel its warmth against the shirt of his uniform, its tan fabric dark with sweat.
Mogotsi began to search the opposite hillside with a slow pan of his 10x50 binoculars. He knew they were close. As he did each day, he’d been following their tracks since he’d spotted them on the road. They were old friends. If he was patient, he would eventually spot them.
Seeing nothing through the high-powered optics, Mogotsi dropped them to his chest and let his experienced eyes scan the slopes unaided, watching for the hint of movement that would reveal his targets against the rugged browns and greys. The rainy season had ended a month earlier, and already, most of the trees and shrubs on the far hillside ― the acacias, mopanes, and shepherd trees ― were showing signs of drought, their leaves drooping or edged with brown. Surprisingly, a few were still vibrant green. He used these as landmarks while his eyes moved in a practised pattern. He slid his Save the Rhino Trust hat from his head, its dark-green brim ringed with salty white. A slight breeze blew from the north, carrying with it the smell of heat, of parched grasses, of the baking rock at his back, of something vaguely organic.
His eyes continued the sweep.
After a few moments of silent observation, Mogotsi finally saw motion. He again raised the binoculars and watched as the creatures cautiously emerged from behind a grove of mopane trees. It was a pair of black rhinos, a cow and a calf. The pointed lip and lack of hump on the cow confirmed the species. They were moving from right to left, the calf behind and partly obscured by the mother’s larger body. He saw the notch in the cow’s left ear and knew it was Linda. The calf was Buhle, or “Beautiful.” Mogotsi had been given the honour of naming her because he was the first to see her after she was born.
Linda was leading Buhle away from the shade of the trees, though they’d normally be napping at this time. Mogotsi knew Linda’s eyesight was not keen enough to see him at this distance, so he wondered if she’d heard his footsteps as he came up the ridge, or if she’d caught his scent on a slight shift in the wind. Or had she detected the scent of something more dangerous?
Mogotsi smiled. Seeing wild rhinos always gave him pleasure, even though he saw them almost daily. Ten years ago, that pleasure had come from the thought of a quick payday. Then, he had carried a .303 rifle in his hand and a large axe in his backpack. Like today, he’d slowly stalked the animals, staying downwind. His goal would have been to get close enough to the cow so that he could shoot her and, as quickly as possible, hack the two horns from her skull, the larger one in the front, the much smaller one behind. On the two-hour drive to meet his buyer in the town of Kamanjab, he would not have given any thought to the fate of the orphaned calf.
But Mogotsi’s days as a poacher were over. As a full-time rhino ranger hired by the local ?Khoadi-//Hôas Conservancy, he was a valued member of the team and could now comfortably support his family with a regular salary. Having grown up with a father and a grandfather who had both hunted illegally and sold horn and ivory to shadowy buyers, or used illicit bushmeat to barter with hungry neighbours, it had taken Mogotsi two years to shift his thinking. But he now understood the saying “A dead rhino will feed a family for a week; a live rhino will feed a family for a lifetime.” He knew it, his family knew it, and so, too, did his community. His wife and sons no longer had to endure boom-and-bust cycles, with money for food or clothing there one day and gone the next. His family and friends respected him, and he was free of worry over going to jail or paying hefty fines. Life was better now.
In his notebook, Mogotsi recorded the rhino pair’s condition and direction of travel, using a handheld GPS unit to determine their exact location. Even though he knew the animals by name, he sketched in the length of their horns, the size and shape of their ears, and descriptions of their tails. Most importantly, he noted his distance from them and their reaction to him at that distance. He knew that this data would be used to fine-tune the guide-lines they followed when they brought out guests from the local eco-lodge to watch these and other rhinos.
Mogotsi rose, pulled his cap down low, and moved out of the shade. He began to walk parallel to the path of the animals, stepping carefully around rocks the size of soccer and cricket balls, moving downhill along the spine of the ridge he had climbed earlier. He looked toward where he expected the rhinos to be heading: a water hole in a low draw, visible in the distance as a copse of green trees. There, he saw a herd of elephant cows and calves, the adults feeding on acacia leaves above their heads, the youngsters cavorting in and out of a tiny pool of water.
Picking his way carefully along the rocky ridge while keeping his eyes on the rhinos and on the ground at his feet for any sign ― tracks or scat ― that other animals were around, Mogotsi almost missed it ― something lay in an opening to his left. When he saw it, he knew that things had changed, suddenly and dramatically. After two days of searching as he’d shadowed the rhinos, it was the very thing he had hoped not to find.
Mogotsi froze, Linda and Buhle forgotten for the moment. Myriad tracks ― he recognized those of black-backed jackals, spotted hyenas, and vultures ― led to the gruesome pile. Though the bones were mostly picked clean of flesh, he knew they hadn’t been there long; he saw traces of blood and sinew in their crevices. Where sharp molars and incisors had cracked open the bones, the marrow was still red. The action of the scavengers had most likely erased any evidence of the cause of death.
The only portion of the skeleton that still resembled its original structure was a length of spine, and only because the lobes, tongues, and planes of the vertebrae fit together like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. The circular pelvis sat next to it, as if resting, waiting for its owner to return. Turning in a slow circle, Mogotsi saw the rest of the bones scattered over a vast area. The skull there on the slope just above him, laying on its right side, empty sockets staring, the lower jaw missing, as was most of the left side of the skull. A lone femur lay a few feet away.
Mogotsi stood quietly, shocked by the ghastly sight, frightened of the implications it would have for the safari lodge and the lucrative wildlife-viewing program that brought new visitors to the conservancy each week. He had to report his find; if he didn’t, someone else would eventually. But most of all, he wondered about the e?ect this discovery would have upon him and his family.
Deep in the Klip River Valley, the sun was dropping steadily toward the horizon, and Mogotsi scanned the scrub brush around him. Was he in danger of becoming the next meal for the area’s predators and scavengers, which had tasted human flesh, perhaps for the first time?
Slowly, Mogotsi fished the portable radio out of his pocket and raised it to his lips. “Klip River Lodge,” he said in a near whisper, “this is Sam. I have found what we have been looking for. I need you to send the police.” He was purposefully obtuse in case any lodge guests were listening.
The voice of the dispatcher crackled in his ear. “What did you find, Sam?”
“I think … I think it’s Chioto.”
“Where are you?”
Mogotsi gave the dispatcher the local name for the area ― DuRaan East ― and his coordinates from the GPS, just in case.
A response came five minutes later. “Sam, the police are on their way. I also reached the manager on the phone. He is in Windhoek but will come back right away. He wants you to stay there until the police arrive.”
“I will,” said Mogotsi, again turning slowly to look around.
The radio crackled again, but this time came the voice of his partner for the day, a man who was watching a second pair of rhinos about a kilometre away: “I copy that, Sam. I will come to where you are.”
Mogotsi hesitatingly took a step toward the skull, respectfully. Knowing he shouldn’t, but unable to help himself, he gingerly picked it up, turned it to face him, and stared into the empty sockets. “I am so sorry this happened to you, my friend.” A clump of soil fell from the right side of the skull, revealing a hole the diameter of his thumb, opposite to where a chunck of the skull was missing.
For Mogotsi, there was no doubt that this was all that remained of Chioto Shipanga, a fellow ranger who’d been missing for two days, the subject of an intensive search by friends, family, and colleagues. Mogotsi thought about his sister, Martha, and the devastation that his brother-in-law’s death would cause, not only for her, but for their whole family.
May 24
Sam Mogotsi climbed to the top of a ridge, slowly, quietly. The dry, crystalline soil crunched beneath his boots. It was midday and the sun was high and hot, sucking the moisture from his skin. Since leaving his remote house at dawn, he had been driving and walking for more than five hours and was keen to be home by the time his two boys returned from school. After checking the ground for snakes and scorpions, he lowered himself and sat in the limited shade of a large boulder, his back against the rust-coloured sandstone. He could feel its warmth against the shirt of his uniform, its tan fabric dark with sweat.
Mogotsi began to search the opposite hillside with a slow pan of his 10x50 binoculars. He knew they were close. As he did each day, he’d been following their tracks since he’d spotted them on the road. They were old friends. If he was patient, he would eventually spot them.
Seeing nothing through the high-powered optics, Mogotsi dropped them to his chest and let his experienced eyes scan the slopes unaided, watching for the hint of movement that would reveal his targets against the rugged browns and greys. The rainy season had ended a month earlier, and already, most of the trees and shrubs on the far hillside ― the acacias, mopanes, and shepherd trees ― were showing signs of drought, their leaves drooping or edged with brown. Surprisingly, a few were still vibrant green. He used these as landmarks while his eyes moved in a practised pattern. He slid his Save the Rhino Trust hat from his head, its dark-green brim ringed with salty white. A slight breeze blew from the north, carrying with it the smell of heat, of parched grasses, of the baking rock at his back, of something vaguely organic.
His eyes continued the sweep.
After a few moments of silent observation, Mogotsi finally saw motion. He again raised the binoculars and watched as the creatures cautiously emerged from behind a grove of mopane trees. It was a pair of black rhinos, a cow and a calf. The pointed lip and lack of hump on the cow confirmed the species. They were moving from right to left, the calf behind and partly obscured by the mother’s larger body. He saw the notch in the cow’s left ear and knew it was Linda. The calf was Buhle, or “Beautiful.” Mogotsi had been given the honour of naming her because he was the first to see her after she was born.
Linda was leading Buhle away from the shade of the trees, though they’d normally be napping at this time. Mogotsi knew Linda’s eyesight was not keen enough to see him at this distance, so he wondered if she’d heard his footsteps as he came up the ridge, or if she’d caught his scent on a slight shift in the wind. Or had she detected the scent of something more dangerous?
Mogotsi smiled. Seeing wild rhinos always gave him pleasure, even though he saw them almost daily. Ten years ago, that pleasure had come from the thought of a quick payday. Then, he had carried a .303 rifle in his hand and a large axe in his backpack. Like today, he’d slowly stalked the animals, staying downwind. His goal would have been to get close enough to the cow so that he could shoot her and, as quickly as possible, hack the two horns from her skull, the larger one in the front, the much smaller one behind. On the two-hour drive to meet his buyer in the town of Kamanjab, he would not have given any thought to the fate of the orphaned calf.
But Mogotsi’s days as a poacher were over. As a full-time rhino ranger hired by the local ?Khoadi-//Hôas Conservancy, he was a valued member of the team and could now comfortably support his family with a regular salary. Having grown up with a father and a grandfather who had both hunted illegally and sold horn and ivory to shadowy buyers, or used illicit bushmeat to barter with hungry neighbours, it had taken Mogotsi two years to shift his thinking. But he now understood the saying “A dead rhino will feed a family for a week; a live rhino will feed a family for a lifetime.” He knew it, his family knew it, and so, too, did his community. His wife and sons no longer had to endure boom-and-bust cycles, with money for food or clothing there one day and gone the next. His family and friends respected him, and he was free of worry over going to jail or paying hefty fines. Life was better now.
In his notebook, Mogotsi recorded the rhino pair’s condition and direction of travel, using a handheld GPS unit to determine their exact location. Even though he knew the animals by name, he sketched in the length of their horns, the size and shape of their ears, and descriptions of their tails. Most importantly, he noted his distance from them and their reaction to him at that distance. He knew that this data would be used to fine-tune the guide-lines they followed when they brought out guests from the local eco-lodge to watch these and other rhinos.
Mogotsi rose, pulled his cap down low, and moved out of the shade. He began to walk parallel to the path of the animals, stepping carefully around rocks the size of soccer and cricket balls, moving downhill along the spine of the ridge he had climbed earlier. He looked toward where he expected the rhinos to be heading: a water hole in a low draw, visible in the distance as a copse of green trees. There, he saw a herd of elephant cows and calves, the adults feeding on acacia leaves above their heads, the youngsters cavorting in and out of a tiny pool of water.
Picking his way carefully along the rocky ridge while keeping his eyes on the rhinos and on the ground at his feet for any sign ― tracks or scat ― that other animals were around, Mogotsi almost missed it ― something lay in an opening to his left. When he saw it, he knew that things had changed, suddenly and dramatically. After two days of searching as he’d shadowed the rhinos, it was the very thing he had hoped not to find.
Mogotsi froze, Linda and Buhle forgotten for the moment. Myriad tracks ― he recognized those of black-backed jackals, spotted hyenas, and vultures ― led to the gruesome pile. Though the bones were mostly picked clean of flesh, he knew they hadn’t been there long; he saw traces of blood and sinew in their crevices. Where sharp molars and incisors had cracked open the bones, the marrow was still red. The action of the scavengers had most likely erased any evidence of the cause of death.
The only portion of the skeleton that still resembled its original structure was a length of spine, and only because the lobes, tongues, and planes of the vertebrae fit together like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. The circular pelvis sat next to it, as if resting, waiting for its owner to return. Turning in a slow circle, Mogotsi saw the rest of the bones scattered over a vast area. The skull there on the slope just above him, laying on its right side, empty sockets staring, the lower jaw missing, as was most of the left side of the skull. A lone femur lay a few feet away.
Mogotsi stood quietly, shocked by the ghastly sight, frightened of the implications it would have for the safari lodge and the lucrative wildlife-viewing program that brought new visitors to the conservancy each week. He had to report his find; if he didn’t, someone else would eventually. But most of all, he wondered about the e?ect this discovery would have upon him and his family.
Deep in the Klip River Valley, the sun was dropping steadily toward the horizon, and Mogotsi scanned the scrub brush around him. Was he in danger of becoming the next meal for the area’s predators and scavengers, which had tasted human flesh, perhaps for the first time?
Slowly, Mogotsi fished the portable radio out of his pocket and raised it to his lips. “Klip River Lodge,” he said in a near whisper, “this is Sam. I have found what we have been looking for. I need you to send the police.” He was purposefully obtuse in case any lodge guests were listening.
The voice of the dispatcher crackled in his ear. “What did you find, Sam?”
“I think … I think it’s Chioto.”
“Where are you?”
Mogotsi gave the dispatcher the local name for the area ― DuRaan East ― and his coordinates from the GPS, just in case.
A response came five minutes later. “Sam, the police are on their way. I also reached the manager on the phone. He is in Windhoek but will come back right away. He wants you to stay there until the police arrive.”
“I will,” said Mogotsi, again turning slowly to look around.
The radio crackled again, but this time came the voice of his partner for the day, a man who was watching a second pair of rhinos about a kilometre away: “I copy that, Sam. I will come to where you are.”
Mogotsi hesitatingly took a step toward the skull, respectfully. Knowing he shouldn’t, but unable to help himself, he gingerly picked it up, turned it to face him, and stared into the empty sockets. “I am so sorry this happened to you, my friend.” A clump of soil fell from the right side of the skull, revealing a hole the diameter of his thumb, opposite to where a chunck of the skull was missing.
For Mogotsi, there was no doubt that this was all that remained of Chioto Shipanga, a fellow ranger who’d been missing for two days, the subject of an intensive search by friends, family, and colleagues. Mogotsi thought about his sister, Martha, and the devastation that his brother-in-law’s death would cause, not only for her, but for their whole family.
Product details
- Publisher : Dundurn (October 22, 2019)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 328 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1459740874
- ISBN-13 : 978-1459740877
- Item Weight : 11.3 ounces
- Dimensions : 5 x 1.3 x 8 inches
-
Best Sellers Rank:
#2,604,419 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #498 in Canadian National Parks Travel Guides
- #6,234 in Women's Adventure Fiction (Books)
- #11,671 in Crime Action & Adventure
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Reviewed in the United States on December 1, 2019
Verified Purchase
Although I find the odd title a bit off-putting, I found this novel an excellent read. I am always a sucker for interesting settings, and this is the story of a dangerous investigation into rhino poaching in Namibia. The lure of big profits attracts both local Africans and Asian sellers who fund them, so suspense abounds as the team of female investigators follow the twisted path of poached rhino horns across the country. Investigator Jenny Willson soon discovers that the only people she can trust are the other women on her team. I've been to Africa and am also very concerned about poaching there, so I found this very realistic and hard to put down. - Reviewed by the author of the Sam Westin Mysteries
Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2019
Verified Purchase
For anyone who might ever think about taking a safari in Africa, this is a great read because it tells a compelling story while giving important insight into the critical conservation issues facing Namibia, and similarly other countries on the continent (and elsewhere in the world). Kudos to Dave Butler for digging into such a crucial topic on the world stage, while writing a highly readable novel at the same time.
Reviewed in the United States on February 11, 2020
Jenny Willson and her friend Tracy Brown have travelled to Namibia to help train game rangers gain better skills in their fight against poaching, especially rhinos. Jenny is hoping the experience will help her recover from the tragic loss of her mother and give herself time to consider whether she wants to return to work with the Parks Canada Board.
The pair have the opportunity of travelling to various lodges and game reserves before their real task of training future game wardens begins. It’s on the trip that she meets Danny Trang, a Canadian travel journalist. After her last disastrous encounter with a journalist, she’s very wary of his wish to be friends. Little does she realise how important he will become once she and her team start investigating the murder of a game ranger and the brutal killing of a rhino mother and death by hunger of her calf.
I would spoil this review if I mentioned more of the storyline. What I can say that is that Dave Butler who says he’s only visited Namibia twice has absolutely captured the heart and soul of Namibia in this fast-paced thriller as Jenny and the team she’s trained, go about tracking down the perpetrators of the syndicate running the poaching and slaughter of rhinos for their keratin horns.
Very few authors managed to capture the spirit of a country but Dave Butler has. Namibia has a very interesting history and has seen some terrible conflicts in the past and yet in the short time since its independence from South African rule, it has managed to turn itself into a country which realises its future lies in tourism and conservation, meaning that laws protecting their wildlife are some of the most progressive in Africa. Butler, through Jenny’s secondment, manages not to just give us exceptionally well-drawn characters but the history of the country and vivid descriptions of the landscape.
I can’t find enough words to praise this novel. All I can say is “read this book! “
Rony
The Elite Book Group received a copy of the book to review.
The pair have the opportunity of travelling to various lodges and game reserves before their real task of training future game wardens begins. It’s on the trip that she meets Danny Trang, a Canadian travel journalist. After her last disastrous encounter with a journalist, she’s very wary of his wish to be friends. Little does she realise how important he will become once she and her team start investigating the murder of a game ranger and the brutal killing of a rhino mother and death by hunger of her calf.
I would spoil this review if I mentioned more of the storyline. What I can say that is that Dave Butler who says he’s only visited Namibia twice has absolutely captured the heart and soul of Namibia in this fast-paced thriller as Jenny and the team she’s trained, go about tracking down the perpetrators of the syndicate running the poaching and slaughter of rhinos for their keratin horns.
Very few authors managed to capture the spirit of a country but Dave Butler has. Namibia has a very interesting history and has seen some terrible conflicts in the past and yet in the short time since its independence from South African rule, it has managed to turn itself into a country which realises its future lies in tourism and conservation, meaning that laws protecting their wildlife are some of the most progressive in Africa. Butler, through Jenny’s secondment, manages not to just give us exceptionally well-drawn characters but the history of the country and vivid descriptions of the landscape.
I can’t find enough words to praise this novel. All I can say is “read this book! “
Rony
The Elite Book Group received a copy of the book to review.
Reviewed in the United States on October 28, 2019
Rating: 3.5 rounded up to 4 exotic stars
This is the third book in Dave Butler’s ‘Jenny Willson’ mystery series. I have not had a chance to read the first two books in the series. However, I have purchased them, and based on this book, I can’t wait to have some time to dive into the first two installments. Jenny Willson is a park ranger in the Canadian Rockies. Due to some tough months at home, she gladly accepted an offer to leave Canada for a little while. Jenny and her friend Tracy are in Namibia to help teach wildlife law enforcement techniques.
I learned so much about Namibia in this book. I loved that! Namibia is just north of South Africa, and has only been an independent country for about 30 years. It is trying to build a conservation ethic amongst the population in order to protect the wildlife and bolster its tourism economy. Unfortunately, rhinoceros horns and elephant tusks are still extremely valuable on the black market. Poachers are still willing to take the risk of killing these animals in order to earn more money than most of the population sees in a year.
Jenny is pulled into a murder mystery when Sam Mogotsi enlists her help. He has been arrested for the murder of his brother-in-law Chioto, and the illegal killing of a rhinoceros cow and her calf. Sam works as a guide at one of the tourist hotels, and while he used to be a poacher, he put that life behind him a decade ago. He now spends his time following and protecting the rhinoceros.
There are powerful forces working in the background against Sam and Jenny. There is a lot of money to be lost if poaching is in fact ended. Can Sam be exonerated? Can Jenny along with a female team of wildlife law enforcements officers bring the correct culprit to justice?
This is a fun mystery that delves deeply into the various tribes, and the geographical diversity in Namibia. I’m so glad that this series was recently recommended to me. I’d recommend this for readers who like a good mystery, and like to learn interesting facts about wildlife conservation and Namibia in the process. I found this book to be well worth my time.
‘Thank-You’ to NetGalley; the publisher, Dundurn Press; and the author, Dave Butler for providing a free e-ARC copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
This is the third book in Dave Butler’s ‘Jenny Willson’ mystery series. I have not had a chance to read the first two books in the series. However, I have purchased them, and based on this book, I can’t wait to have some time to dive into the first two installments. Jenny Willson is a park ranger in the Canadian Rockies. Due to some tough months at home, she gladly accepted an offer to leave Canada for a little while. Jenny and her friend Tracy are in Namibia to help teach wildlife law enforcement techniques.
I learned so much about Namibia in this book. I loved that! Namibia is just north of South Africa, and has only been an independent country for about 30 years. It is trying to build a conservation ethic amongst the population in order to protect the wildlife and bolster its tourism economy. Unfortunately, rhinoceros horns and elephant tusks are still extremely valuable on the black market. Poachers are still willing to take the risk of killing these animals in order to earn more money than most of the population sees in a year.
Jenny is pulled into a murder mystery when Sam Mogotsi enlists her help. He has been arrested for the murder of his brother-in-law Chioto, and the illegal killing of a rhinoceros cow and her calf. Sam works as a guide at one of the tourist hotels, and while he used to be a poacher, he put that life behind him a decade ago. He now spends his time following and protecting the rhinoceros.
There are powerful forces working in the background against Sam and Jenny. There is a lot of money to be lost if poaching is in fact ended. Can Sam be exonerated? Can Jenny along with a female team of wildlife law enforcements officers bring the correct culprit to justice?
This is a fun mystery that delves deeply into the various tribes, and the geographical diversity in Namibia. I’m so glad that this series was recently recommended to me. I’d recommend this for readers who like a good mystery, and like to learn interesting facts about wildlife conservation and Namibia in the process. I found this book to be well worth my time.
‘Thank-You’ to NetGalley; the publisher, Dundurn Press; and the author, Dave Butler for providing a free e-ARC copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
Top reviews from other countries
ppsphil
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Really Good Entry in This Fine Series and I Highly Recommemd It!
Reviewed in Canada on October 4, 2019Verified Purchase
I have enjoyed reading the first two books in this series although I didn’t think the second was quite as good as the first and as I mentioned in my review of it I was curious and a bit skeptical, after the way it ended for Jenny, as to how Mr Butler could even have her continue in another adventure. However I am happy to admit that I was dead wrong and book 3 turned out to be a fine story and every bit as good as the first book if not better. I know very little about Namibia so I have to accept that Mr Butler’s great descriptions of the landscapes, people, weather and customs etc. are reasonably accurate and well researched and of course the various forms of corruption, whether it’s true or not, are a common assumption in most emerging nations. The actions of nations like China, Russia and North Korea and the poaching and poverty problems are all lifted from current headlines and provide the background for some wild drives over some almost roads and lots of action, shootouts, plans that go sideways and a pretty solid ending. Great caste of well developed characters all of them except Jenny and Tracy being newcomers and Jenny has become an even stronger character except when it comes to her love life. Perhaps she’ll relax a bit and give Danny Trang a chance in book 4 because I thought he’s a pretty nice character and played an important part in this story. I didn’t find the big twist to be a surprise as I had pretty well guessed it even though I didn’t really want it to be true but I think there were enough clues leading to it and it was probably the only logical way for the story to end. A good read that I recommend and I’m looking forward to book 4 and I guess and hope that Jenny’s back in BC.
Janice Wilton
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent!!!
Reviewed in Canada on October 20, 2019Verified Purchase
All of Dave Butlers books have been awesome! This book wants you to keeping reading to see what happens
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