Photo de l'auteur

Susan Slater

Auteur de The Pumpkin Seed Massacre

13+ oeuvres 217 utilisateurs 14 critiques

Séries

Œuvres de Susan Slater

The Pumpkin Seed Massacre (1999) 68 exemplaires
Thunderbird (2002) 36 exemplaires
Yellow Lies (2000) 29 exemplaires
Crooks, Crimes, and Christmas (2003) — Contributeur — 23 exemplaires
Flash Flood (2002) 19 exemplaires
Five O'Clock Shadow (2004) 11 exemplaires
Rollover (2014) 10 exemplaires
Hair of the Dog (2015) 10 exemplaires
0 to 60 (2009) 4 exemplaires
Fire Dancer (2018) 2 exemplaires
A Way to the Manger (2017) 2 exemplaires
Under a Mulberry Moon (2018) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

More Stories from the Twilight Zone (2010) — Contributeur — 44 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Slater, Susan
Date de naissance
1942
Sexe
female
Nationalité
USA
Pays (pour la carte)
USA
Lieu de naissance
Kansas, USA

Membres

Critiques


Pretty good story, the writing is detailed but distant. I am happy to read this author's works, but I don't seek them out.
 
Signalé
AnneMarieMcD | 4 autres critiques | Jan 16, 2024 |
Psychologist Ben Pecos has just returned to his birthplace, the Tewa Pueblo in New Mexico, to intern with the Indian Health Service. He was adopted as a young child, growing up outside the Pueblo. Unfortunately, just as he returns, Tribal elders begin dying from a mysterious illness that kills quickly. Ten tribal members, including Pecos' grandmother, die from the virus. The IHS and an investigative reporter from Albuquerque work together to discover the source of the upper respiratory illness and how to stop it. During their investigation, they discover that the outbreak might not be accidental and that land fraud, murder and greed are behind the deaths.

I enjoyed the descriptions of life in the Pueblo and Tewa traditions. But, the mystery portion of the plot just seemed a bit too contrived. The virus is spread with tainted pumpkin seeds by men who want to build a casino in the Pueblo. The whole time I was reading I kept thinking to myself that in real life if a tribal elder stood in the way of major criminals there would be an easier way to murder him than to give him a packet of pumpkin seeds tainted with manufactured hantavirus. The plot wound around and became unnecessarily convoluted because the murder plot itself was ridiculously melodramatic. People with greedy, evil intent don't cook up devious plans to kill people with a virus....they just kill the person outright, or make it look like a simple accident. An over-done murder plan with too many people involved just increases the chances of something going wrong.....and in this case, that's the very thing that happens. Instead of killing only the one tribal elder they wanted dead....they killed 10 people. Then they had to kill more people to cover up the fact that they had killed people. That does help an author round out a 250 page book, but it's obviously fiction and not something that would realistically happen. I almost stopped reading the book when someone with the IHS called Ben Pecos to tell him that she had found micro-punctures at the base of the pumpkin seeds where something had been injected. It was like bad CSI-style pseudo-science.

The romance angle between Ben Pecos and Julie Conlin, a reporter from Albuquerque, seemed a bit forced to me. It was a bit like the author knew she needed to have some romance in the book so just conveniently dropped in a cute, anglo female reporter and *poof*.... insta-romance! Bit meh on the lovey-dovey portion of the plot, too.

There are two more Ben Pecos mystery novels by Susan Slater. I like the tribal lore and descriptions enough to read the next book. I hope the mystery element is better in the remaining books. That portion of the plot really fell flat for me in this first book. If the second book, Yellow Lies, is as overly melodramatic as this one, I won't read the third and final book of the series.

All in all, this book was ok. I much prefer Tony Hillerman.

My rating: 5/10
Ages: 13



… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
JuliW | 4 autres critiques | Nov 22, 2020 |


Set in a New Mexico pueblo, this novel gives an interesting view of Native American customs and beliefs. I picked it up largely because of the recommendation by Tony Hillerman whose Navaho stories I find totally fascinating.

The plot focuses on a series of sudden deaths among elderly members of the tribe, including the grandmother of the leading character, Ben Pecos. Ben is a psychologist serving an internship at the local Indian health centre, returning after many years to the place of his birth, and uncertain whether he wants to stay there. He becomes involved in the search for the source of the deaths. I’m not clear how a psychologist fits into the situation - that part of his background doesn’t enter into the story at all.

I found it interesting, but not gripping, The characters did not come to life for me, except for one minor character, a very old man who is unable to communicate verbally, but is nevertheless endearing.
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
Kindleifier | 4 autres critiques | Oct 7, 2019 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
13
Aussi par
2
Membres
217
Popularité
#102,846
Évaluation
½ 3.3
Critiques
14
ISBN
53
Langues
2

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