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Stewball by Peter Bowen — book cover

Stewball

by Peter Bowen
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Overview

Gabriel Du Pré's Aunt Pauline has a list of husbands and ex-husbands and future husbands even she herself has trouble remembering. So Du Pré isn't exactly surprised when she shows up in Toussaint complaining that her current man, a lovable roughneck named Badger, has run off. His longer-than-usual absence has Pauline worried, and Du Pré promises to look into exactly what sort of trouble he has gotten himself into.

No one quite imagines, least of all Pauline, that the first thing Du Pré will find in his investigation is Badger's body, lying in a remote part of the Montana wilderness with a bullet-hole in the base of his skull. Du Pré has a hunch his old friend and foil Harvey Wallace will be interested in the case-after all, Gabriel Du Pré's Montana is teeming with just the sorts of people that tend to interest Wallace's employers, the FBI, and the odds that Badger got mixed up with them seem inordinately high.

The trail leads straight into the teeming underworld of illegal, remote brush races involving a ragtag bunch of traveling horsemen, with many thousands of dollars wagered upon each race. Forced to go undercover to determine how Badger met his end, Du Pré finds his own horse and jockey to bet on in another complicated, fascinating outing for Montana's favorite Métis son.

Peter Bowen's tough, rough-edged, likable hero rides again in Stewball, an intricate installment in a classic series by one of the genre's quirkiest and most beloved practitioners.

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, and the Gabriel Du Pré mysteries, in part because "the Métis are a great people, a wonderful people, and not many Americans know anything about them."

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Editorials

Library Journal

When his aunt's latest husband runs off, Gabriel (The Tumbler) follows but finds the man shot to death. A little investigation shows that the victim and his cohorts may have run afoul of the FBI. Rough and ready in the West. Bowen lives in Montana. Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

The FBI, the ATF and the fundamentalist Patrick Henry Patriots lock horns in cowboy country. Auntie Pauline, who's gone through four husbands, is keen on holding on to Badger, her fifth. When he disappears after cutting a deal with the feds-they'll look the other way at his drug misadventures if he'll do them a small favor-she guilts her nephew, fiddling cowboy Gabriel Du Pre, into chasing after him. The coyotes have been at Badger's body before Du Pre catches up with him, and for Auntie Pauline's sake he lets Blackfoot FBI agent Harvey Wallace talk him into taking over for Badger, going undercover with Booger Tom and flushing out the guys running brush races, who not only launder the betting take but use it to finance political causes to the right of Genghis Khan. To enter the brush races, the feds supply Stewpot the horse, Du Pre's horse-crazy granddaughter Lourdes becomes the jockey, and the bets are bankrolled by Du Pre's rich friend Bart. But the bad guys are suspicious, and it will take all the wiles of gorgeous on-leave agent Samantha Pigeon, saloonkeeper Susan Klein, Du Pre's gal-pal Madelaine, and his other granddaughter, Precocious Pallas, to save the day. The plot gets lost somewhere between Montana and South Dakota-routine for plot-impaired Bowen (Badlands, 2003, etc.)-but there's real pleasure watching the sassy women outsmart all the men, all the time.

Book Details

Published
August 1, 2005
Publisher
Minotaur Books,US
Pages
224
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780312277307

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