
It is not that teacher-outdoorsman
Will Buchanan goes looking for murders to solve, although he does
so once again in this well-crafted, often gripping entry in Eslick's
White Mountains series (Tracked in the Whites, Snowkill).
Rather, between his romantic entanglement with the local sheriff
and the troubled family background of one of his students, Buchanan
has little choice -- especially when he finds himself accused by that
student of rape, thrown in the county jail and put on leave from
the prep school where he works. What else is a man to do but rescue
the student from the psychosis of her dysfunctional family, win
back the woman he loves and restore his own and his school's good
names? Buchanan is a man's man: at home in New Hampshire's rugged
wilderness, partial to fine whisky, emotionally restrained, a straight
talker. Buchanan even fights bare-knuckle with a former navy SEAL.
Little surprise then, when along comes a character named Jacob Barnes,
Eslick's homage to Hemingway. If occasional lapses into melodrama
hardly evoke that literary lion, Eslick may surpass the master in
the strongly individualized portrayals of the story's female characters.
In the meantime, the autumnal colors of the White Mountains beckon.
Though the woods prove dark, deep and deadly, readers should enjoy
the excitement of joining Will Buchanan on the trail.
Publishers Weekly Sept. 15
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