Review by Booklist Review
Fleeing purse snatcher LeRoy Hooten suffers an unlikely demise in Granite City, Colorado, after being hit first by a can of black-eyed peas thrown by Police Chief Scott Parris, then by an uppercut from Deputy Charlie Moon. When a less-than-accurate account of Hooten's death goes viral, his mother a wealthy, wheelchair-bound Illinois widow with Mob connections hires an assassin to make the lawmen suffer as she has. Meanwhile, Louella Simpson, granddaughter of a legendary Texas Ranger, starts tracking the assassin in a quest to turn her bounty-hunter exploits into a true-crime book. Moon's crotchety Aunt Daisy Perika, a Ute shaman, continues to bedevil her nephew with accounts from the spirit world just for the fun of it as the various players descend on Granite City, where mistaken identities complicate things, and some good people die. This seventeenth Charlie Moon mystery features Doss' trademark folksy prose style, replete with asides to the reader that can be off-putting. But it's easy to fall under his sway and thoroughly enjoy this entry in a series that skillfully blends crime and Native American spirituality with a light touch.--Leber, Michele Copyright 2010 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
The 17th and last Charlie Moon mystery (after 2011's Coffin Man) from Doss (1939-2012) forms a fitting capstone to this offbeat western series. When purse-snatcher LeRoy Hooten expires shortly after Charlie's friend Scott Parris, the police chief of Granite City, Colo., hits LeRoy in the head with a can of black-eyed peas, the late criminal's mother, a wealthy mob widow, puts a mysterious assassin known as the Cowboy on Scott and Charlie's trail. Doss spins out a slight plot, otherwise preoccupied with the ominous visions of Charlie's irascible shaman aunt, Daisy Perika, and would-be bounty hunter Louella Smithson up to its surprisingly bloody conclusion, with a folksy, humorously digressive storytelling style as old-school as his western lawmen heroes. Some readers will find it hokey, but Doss's fans will enjoy a final chance to explore a world that offers glimpses of real-life Ute culture as well as violence that falls somewhere between Cormac McCarthy and Tex Avery. Agent: Rich Henshaw, the Richard Henshaw Group. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Doss, who died this past spring, parts company with Charlie Moon (Coffin Man, 2011, etc.) in this 17th and final go-round. It's an ignominious ending for purse snatcher LeRoy Hooten, who enters the hereafter when Granite City chief of police Scott Parris beans him with a can of black-eyed peas while his pal Charlie Moon, part-time deputy, former Ute tribal investigator, inveterate gambler and laconic rancher, looks on. Hooten's mom, Francine, who takes offense at the lucky pitch that caused her son's demise, calls on the notorious "cowboy assassin" to take out Parris and Moon, thus setting in motion an all-consuming debacle that strews bodies and witticisms from Illinois to Colorado, with stopovers along the way for spirit sightings, pitukupf visitations, double dates, engagements and disengagements, grumblings from Moon's irascible old auntie Daisy Perkia, and deep sighs and despair from lovesick Ute-Papago orphan Sarah Frank. Of course there are a few detours to allow a retired Texas Ranger, his private-eye-wannabe granddaughter and a luscious FBI agent to have their say and slay while still leaving room for red herrings that jack up the suspense. In all, five will expire, assumed identities will crumble and not a single reader will get through a page without a guffaw or two. The puckish Doss, who combined charm, mayhem and deviously clever clues, will be much missed.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.