Review by Booklist Review
National park ranger Anna Pigeon dislikes caves as much as Indiana Jones dislikes snakes. But she goes underground when her friend Frieda Dierkz is injured while surveying the newly discovered Lechugilla Cave, near Carlsbad Caverns in New Mexico. After traveling 16 dangerous, exhausting hours through the cave, Anna learns that someone dropped a rock on Frieda. Faced with numerous suspects and park managers who want to whitewash the incident, Anna pursues Frieda's assailant, who murders another survey member. This seventh Anna Pigeon novel effectively combines Barr's typically compelling characters with the unique cave setting. Her Lechugilla Cave is an ominous and unsettling place, similar in its effect on the reader to the underground in Verne's Journey to the Center of the Earth. The pace slows some near the end, but Barr's gripping prose never loses its hold: we feel Anna's fear acutely, and the tension of the rescue is palpable. Barr fans will also enjoy other outdoor sleuths such as Beverly Connor's Lindsay Chamberlain and Skye Kathleen Moody's Venus Diamond. --John Rowen
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Early in this sixth tale in Barr's evocative and suspenseful series (after 1997's Endangered Species), national park ranger Anna Pigeon is summoned from duty in Colorado to New Mexico's Carlsbad Caverns. A woman caver seriously injured while exploring the nearby Lechuguilla cave is a friend who has asked specifically that Anna help in her rescue. Anna has faced everything from forest fires to deep-water dives with equanimity, but claustrophobia has so far kept her above-ground. "A chilling image filled Anna's mind: herself crouched and whimpering, fear pouring like poison through her limbs, shutting down her brain as the cave closed in around her." Fully aware of her vulnerability, Anna nevertheless takes the plunge, leading readers through a truly harrowing series of tight squeezes. Barr is so good at involving us in Anna's terror that, when Anna finally reaches the surface again, we share her "unadulterated joy. Even the dirt smelled alive." Above ground, Anna quickly becomes involved in pursuing possible links between two murders and soon finds herself a rifleman's target. A sneaky suspicion starts to grow as we share the progress of her investigation of possible suspects within the sharply sketched community of cavers and National Park Service bureaucrats. Barr couldn't possibly ask Annaand usto go back underground again, could she? Wouldn't that be more than courage and credulity could bear? When it happens, of course, it seems inevitable and thoroughly satisfyingthanks to the writing and plotting talents of a master. Mystery Guild main selection; author tour. (Mar.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
An underground classic? Barr's popular park ranger, Anna Pigeon, investigates murder in New Mexico's Carlsbad Caverns. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by School Library Journal Review
YA-When Anna Pigeon learns that fellow park ranger Frieda Dierkz lies injured within the depths of Lechugilla Cavern, she overcomes her claustrophobia and wills herself into the cave, along with the official rescue team. Working against her anxiety, Anna concentrates on the difficulties of moving the woman through passages and over formations while another fear begins to surface. Frieda is sure that an attempt was made on her life and rigged to look like an accident. Her apprehensions prove correct when she is killed by a fall that almost takes Anna's life as well. Left with just a shred of information, Anna sets out to find the killer. Barr brings the intricate, fascinating, and deadly underground world of spelunking into close and intimate focus using Anna's divergent emotions of awe and near terror as she works her way through the total blackness. Readers are immersed in the setting, and Anna's claustrophobia, tangibly intense at times, keeps the tension of the plot tautly controlled. She pushes herself to the limit, determined to solve the mysteries of death and dirty dealings that appear to center on the importance and fate of Lechugilla Cavern. While about half of the story takes place above ground, the intense moments occur in the deep orifices below. Barr has created a variety of characters in the rescue team, each distinct in personality and style. All of the twists and turns of the cave and the plot finally come together in an action-packed ending.-Pam Johnson, Fairfax County Public Library, VA (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
When Mesa Verde National Park dispatcher Frieda Dierkz, on an avocational expedition to explore and survey the Lechuguilla cave in New Mexico's Carlsbad Caverns, is trapped 800 feet beneath the earth's surface by a head injury and a shattered leg, the person she asks authorities above to send after her is her friend Anna Pigeon. Following a week's worth of deep breaths, Anna, together with Carlsbad cave specialist Oscar Iverson and Underground Resource Coordinator Holden Tillman, undertakes a nine-hour journey she compares to ""an expedition into outer space"" toward Frieda and the five other members of her crew--only to hear from Frieda that her accident was no accident at all. Before the rescuers can return with Frieda to the surface, another disastrous ""accident"" heightens the mystery. Then the grueling tour de force of the novel's subterranean first half is matched by violence aboveground as well, and by unwelcome revelations suggesting that several of Frieda's companions--a former lover, his jealous wife, a veteran caver whose sister was killed on Frieda's watch--may have had good reason to kill her. With all the irresistible force of nightmare, Anna's pulled back on a return visit to Lechuguilla, where she'll find much more than she bargained for. Barr's superbly unerring eye for natural setting and human conflict has made Anna's five earlier adventures (Endangered Species, 1997, etc.) as distinctively memorable as the National Parks themselves. This installment is the most suspenseful of all, even though claustrophobes are well-advised to stock up on Prozac before turning the first page. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.