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Indian Country
- Incident at Big Pine
- Narrated by: James Huff
- Length: 6 hrs and 8 mins
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Summary
Fed up with big city life as a copper in a Southern California town, Officer Mike Taylor hands in his notice and moves to rural South Dakota to be a County Sheriff's Deputy. As a blonde haired, blue eyed Caucasian practicing Native American spirituality from a young age, he just never quite fit in. Hoping for a fresh start, Mike soon learns that changing location doesn't change others' perception of you.
When a murder occurs, Mike is thrust into the middle of local prejudices that go back hundreds of years. Speaking the language and being on the Red Road are little help. Unlikely allies surface and friendships are formed bridging divides previously closed. Loyalties pitting races against departments are tested.
When a second murder occurs, matters are only more complicated. Then, a mysterious Native American spiritual leader approaches Mike out of the blue, inviting him to build a lodge and sweat with him.
Will Mike Taylor get back on his spiritual path? And more importantly, will he and his new friends on the Tribal Police department and his own department solve the murders before more happen. And of course, there's a girl....
In a shocking culmination of events that can only be described as noir, Mike and his friends must sort through the fallout.
Indian Country: Incident at Big Pine is book one of this powerful new series called the Sergeant Taylor Mysteries.
Cover art by MiblArt.
What listeners say about Indian Country
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- Book Monitor
- 09-07-23
Some good elements
This book has some really good elements but it is let down by some preachiness, a clunky style, and poor narration.
The story of a cop who moves to a new area and shakes things up with both the local police and the Lakota Tribal police of the reservation intrigued me. The book has two main threads: the murders and corruption, and the settling in and making friends and enemies of Mike, in both the native American and non-native communities. The twist of his being a follower of Lakota spirituality is well realised and makes this a bit different.
The Crimes almost didn't need to be there other than as a plot device to highlight the tensions between communities and police services. The solving of them is not the main focus of the book which is fine but it sort of starts more central and fizzles out a bit as the relationships and conflicts become more important, and although we get an outcome there are a lot of questions unasked as well as unanswered.
The getting to know the locals and the information about the reservation lifestyles and politics were interesting but there were info-dumps and a lack of integration into a wider narrative. In my opinion a bit more show and a bit less tell would have been better.
The author has a real talent for making the places seem real, not just the wider environment but the smaller locales; the RV, the lodge, the cafe. They were all very believable, as were the portraits of the people who populated them.
For me the style of this book was very old fashioned and at times the reader is treated as if we have never seen or read a crime story before. For example I don't need to be told what every acronym means and I think if the author feels people need this they should just add a glossary.
I also felt that more finesse in the telling would have been a better way to highlight racist and cultural issues.
The narrator was really not to my liking, his voice was not varied enough, there were mouth sounds which really should have been edited out in the production process, and sometimes it sounded as though he was wearing false teeth that didn't fit properly.
Having said all that this is not a bad read and a generally pleasant way to while away a few hours in a place that felt very real but very different to my own. I think I would prefer to read the kindle version of any others in the series though, unless the narrator is changed.
I received a free copy of this and am leaving this honest review voluntarily.
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