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Long Son by Peter Bowen — book cover

Long Son

by Peter Bowen
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Overview

In Toussaint, Montana, old family secrets, forgotten for more than one hundred years, come to light after a young woman and her land-owning parents die under suspicious circumstances. When Larry Messmer, the brother and son of the victims, auctions off his parents' ranch, Gabriel Du Pre discovers a string of unexplained deaths buried deep in the family's past. Steeped in the rich traditions of Metis storytelling, Long Son is the sixth in this highly acclaimed series.

About the Author, Peter Bowen

Peter Bowen, a Montanan, writes of the West. Cowboy, hunting and fishing guide, folksinger poet, essayist, and novelist, he's written the picaresque Yellowstone Kelly historical novels, humor columns, and essays on blood sport as Coyote Jack, as well as the Gabriel Due Pre mysteries.

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Editorials

Library Journal

After three members of a Montana family die suspiciously, their son and brother sells the family ranch. Only then does series protagonist Gabriel Du Pr (Thunder Horse, LJ 3/1/98) discover several related suspect deaths. Storytelling and local atmosphere at their best.

Kirkus Reviews

In his sixth outing, Gabriel Du Pré of Toussaint, Montana—Métis Indian; grandfather of many; part-time county inspector; fiddler supreme (Thunder Poise, 1998, etc.)–is as puzzled as Sheriff Benny Klein, FBI man Harvey Wallace, and others when vicious Larry Messmer is brutally shot to death. Messmer had recently come back to the ranch inherited from his parents, who were killed in an auto accident years before. Rumor has it that big-time drug dealing and other unsavory things are happening at the ranch—an idea supported by the death of Messmer's henchman Bongo Masters, found strangled at the sweat lodge of Du Pré's friend Benetsee. Now the ranch is being run by mean dude Kelleher, and Du Pré, with reason to think he may be next, sends his Madelaine to stay with relatives while he holes up with his daughter, son-in-law, and numerous grandchildren. The history of the Messmers is slowly uncovered, going back generations to Albert's tragic Indian Wife Genevette and the murder, never solved, of Larry's sister. In the end, it's new FBI man Ripper, with a history of his own connected to the Messmers, who sees to it that Kelleher gets his just deserts. Bowen's efforts to romanticize Du Pré and the Montana setting are offset by the wandering chaos of his plotting and the casually obscene conversational style of all involved. Tiresome stuff everywhere but in the Toussaint Saloon when the music plays. .

Book Details

Published
April 11, 2000
Publisher
St. Martin's Minotaur
Pages
264
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780312253981

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