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Craig Johnson, 1961-

Book - 2025

"Walt Longmire is back after the escapades of First Frost, and encounters one of his most baffling cases. The Sheriff of Absaroka confronts a cabal of devious outlaws who are hell bent on getting what they want, even though they have to bend and break the law. Walt is stretched to his physical limits to try to stop them, and has to answer the question of just how far he will go to stop these outlaws. Fans of the series will love seeing Walt put into this almost impossible situation, and new fans will fall for the venerable Sheriff as he ties to uphold the law and his own values in this high-stakes mystery from the master of the Western crime novel"--

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MYSTERY/Johnson Craig
2 / 3 copies available
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1st Floor New Shelf MYSTERY/Johnson Craig (NEW SHELF) Checked In
1st Floor New Shelf MYSTERY/Johnson Craig (NEW SHELF) Due Oct 9, 2025
1st Floor New Shelf MYSTERY/Johnson Craig (NEW SHELF) Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
Western fiction
Novels
Published
New York, NY : Viking 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Craig Johnson, 1961- (author)
Physical Description
xiii, 321 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780593830703
9780593830710
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Johnson's detective hero Walt Longmire has had a fine career--21 novels and a six-season TV show run--remarkable for someone a little bit, well, different. He uses words like "indubitably," quotes Percy Shelley's poetry, and educates a lazy coroner on proper autopsy procedure. And there's no hard-boiled cynicism here. We should always, he says, "rise above the natural order of things." But he's a fine lawman, as a friend of his muses in the book. The mistake of anyone working against him is "confusing good with weak." This outing has Longmire clashing with a religious cult out on the "sand anvil" of Wyoming's Red Devil, after a mail person with a more than 300-mile route goes missing. Longmire must rescue a handful of cult victims, older folks who sought something interesting. The novel includes some lively conversations as Longmire goes undercover as a mail carrier following the missing woman's same route.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Walt Longmire goes undercover. When his late wife's cousin Mike Thurman, a postal inspector, asks Walt to find out what happened to Blair McGowan, who never showed up for her 307-mile-long mail route, he agrees. Blair's boyfriend, Benny Schweppe, sold all her stuff soon after she disappeared, so Walt tracks down her 1968 Travelall and buys it back, then starts following Blair's route, pretending he's taking it over. Since most of the route covers the vast Red Desert, an unlikely feature of south-central Wyoming, Walt's not terribly hopeful about finding Blair, an environmental activist who upset some of the groups living out there. Visiting Blair's neighbor, Walt gets into a fight with Benny and ends up getting arrested. As the famous sheriff of Absaroka County, Walt can't remain unknown to local law enforcers, who fill him in on the case. Benny, who's heard that Walt is a sheriff (so much for undercover), tells him about the Order of the Red Gate, a religious cult that moves around the desert. It's run by Zeno Carruthers, who Blair knew in the 1980s when she was in a documentary about alien abduction in California. After Walt starts out on the mail run, Tess Anderson, who Mike Thurman assigned to help him find the way, finds a piece of paper that turns out to be a note saying "SAVE ME" in red lipstick. Venturing into the desert, Walt finds the cult, which consists of a lot of bewildered older folks and a few very tough bodyguards for the cult leaders, who are running a scheme to steal money from their followers, many of whom vanish, supposedly gone to heaven. What follows is a violent, dangerous effort to free the cult members, including Blair. The straight-shooting hero is welcome in duplicitous times, but it's the magnificent desert that captures the imagination. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.