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Indlæser... Camelback Falls: A David Mapstone Mystery (udgave 2003)af Jon Talton
Værk informationCamelback Falls af Jon Talton
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Bliv medlem af LibraryThing for at finde ud af, om du vil kunne lide denne bog. Der er ingen diskussionstråde på Snak om denne bog. Our hero – “Mapstone” is having a conversation with the father (an old time Phoenix guy who knew Mapstone’s father) of his old partner Peralta who was shot in his inauguration as Sheriff. Mapstone has been made the interim Sheriff…"Who do you think shot my son, Sheriff?" he demanded. He didn't wait for an answer. In a higher softer voice he said, "Policemen make a lot of enemies. Good ones and bad ones. Just like lawyers. I know I did. And when all this comes out, they won't hesitate to crucify my son, just like they tried to do me. Whatever the truth." "What do you think the truth is Judge?" His breathing fell back into a wheeze. He said evenly, "Lawyers and history professors, both wordsmiths, both truth-seekers. When we're young we think truth is something that can be bottled and preserved, like some specimen in biology. Now, they tell us everything is relative, that there is no truth, and that's crazy. What do I think? I think a revolution happened in the 1970's, and if that's where your evidence comes from all rules were off."............. Historian turned Deputy David Mapstone gets the call to be interim Sheriff (its a little improbable but...) when his friend Peralta gets installed as Sheriff and then shot at the installment... the story twists and turns on the past and what is true on the outside might not be the real truth..... Another interesting fun read that captures the new and old west... his girlfriend calls him the "History Shamus" ingen anmeldelser | tilføj en anmeldelse
Fiction.
Mystery.
""In the quiet of my forgotten office in the old country courthouse, behind the plastic doorplate that reads 'Deputy David Mapstone, Sheriff's Office Historian, ' I fiddled with the tribal fashion of cops. The tan uniform blouse with epaulets and pocket flaps, the opening above the pocket made for a cheap Cross pen, and the gold-plated 'MCSO' letters running parallel on each side of the collars. ... An off-white felt Stetson sat on my desk. We might be one of the largest urban counties in the United States, but we kept our Old West traditions. ...""Historian-turned-deputy-sheriff David Mapstone returns in this exciting sequel to Jon Talton's "Concrete Desert," When his friend Peralta, newly sworn in as sheriff, is shot by a sniper, "History Shamus" Mapstone can't keep a cool, academic distance. And he'd better not: while Peralta lies comatose in the hospital, the powers-that-be appoint Mapstone acting Sheriff in his place. Mapstone feels unqualified, but he's the only person who's temporary appointment won't infuriate all the other candidates who want the Sheriff's position permanently. Meanwhile, a cryptic note scrawled by Peralta before the shooting forces Mapstone to confront his own personal history, which has drawn him unwittingly into danger. As Mapstone discovers, the past has deadly consequences. The mean streets of the New West have never been more sinister. Ingen biblioteksbeskrivelser fundet. |
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Google Books — Indlæser... GenrerMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyLC-klassificeringVurderingGennemsnit:
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David and Peralta had been partners 20 years before when David was a twenty-something deputy and the slightly older Peralta had been a sergeant. David was at loose ends and joined the sheriff’s department because he really couldn’t think of anything else to do. Then he decided what else he wanted to do. Earning a master’s degree and a Ph.D in history, David had taught at a university and had written a book. But the study and the teaching of history had moved in a direction Mapstone couldn’t make himself go so he returned to Phoenix and moved back into his grandparents’ house, the house in which he had been raised.
Peralta had made David a job offer: he would be a member of the department who would focus on solving cold cases. It was a perfect job for David but he soon realized that Peralta wouldn’t waste David’s talents on cold cases when there were so many hot cases that needed attention.
Now Peralta is in a coma and David learns that the deputy chiefs of the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office had chosen him as acting sheriff because he was the only one every one else was speaking to. Each was determined to be the new chief deputy sheriff or, if the worst happened, have the inside track to become the new sheriff.
When David goes into Peralta’s office he sees his name on the desk calendar. Next to it is written, “Camelback Falls”. The only person David believes he can trust is Deputy Lindsey Adams, the woman he plans to marry. Lindsey is the go to person for information on the internet. She can find anyone with only the smallest bit of information but she can’t find anything on Camelback Falls.
Then, David is pulled into the past. Twenty years ago, two deputies had been killed when they came upon a drug transaction. Peralta and David had been the first two deputies on the scene. The two men loading the cocaine into the trunk blew out the front window of the cruiser. Peralta and David shot back and then there were four dead men in the alley. There were two teenagers in the backseat of the car. Marybeth Watson and Leo O’Keefe are arrested, both claiming they had no idea that they were going to be involved in drug activity. Marybeth was rich, Leo was not. Marybeth got probation and was sent back to her home in Oklahoma. Leo went to jail. He was sentenced to a year but many more years were added when he killed another prisoner.
David learns quickly that Leo O’Keefe has just escaped from jail. He becomes the prime suspect in Peralta’s shooting. The sheriff’s department finds themselves enmeshed in another killiing that ties to the department. Dean Nixon, a former deputy, is found dead, killed by the same gun used in the attack on Peralta. As David and Lindsey investigate, they learn about a group of cops who called themselves the River Hogs. There is a log book that lists the badge numbers of deputies who had taken bribes twenty years ago. Peralta’s number is on the list.
Jon Talton writes very readable, logical, and interesting police procedurals. The books have a bonus – Talton includes information about the history of Phoenix. ( )