Fiction
Related: About this forumAnyone read William Kent Krueger's Cork O'Connor series?
Last edited Tue Aug 30, 2022, 04:08 PM - Edit history (2)
Im working my way through it and think it may be the best of the best. He won the Edgar award for Best Mystery for Ordinary Grace, a stand alone novel in 2014. That was the first book of his I read, which inspired me try the series. Im halfway through Windigo Island, which gives a brief but fascinating history of Duluth, Minnesota, including the good, the bad, and the ugly, as well as a devastating account of the sexual exploitation of, and violence towards Native American women and children. But also deeply spiritual. Terrible and beautiful, and all of a piece.
Ocelot II
(121,523 posts)and I'm familiar with Duluth and some of the other areas in the books, I've found them particularly interesting. I really like how he handles his Native characters.
Mme. Defarge
(8,571 posts)Sorry I misspelled Duluth. Since Im actually listening to the audiobook versions, I miss seeing how things are spelled. Wonderful reader!
Ocelot II
(121,523 posts)I like audiobooks - I listen when I'm out walking - but of course you won't get correct spellings from them. The trade-off is that a good narrator will do accents. There are some British narrators who a great job with the various British accents. The Cork O'Connor narrator isn't all that great with the Minnesota accents, especially the Ojibwe (which is pretty distinctive), but he isn't terrible.
Mme. Defarge
(8,571 posts)SheltieLover
(60,395 posts)Ty for sharing!
Mme. Defarge
(8,571 posts)I may actually start from the beginning after finishing the last one. The great thing about my advanced age is not remembering who done it.
SheltieLover
(60,395 posts)Same here. Makes rereading more fun.
old guy
(3,296 posts)My next read of his is Copper River.
Scrivener7
(53,222 posts)Easterncedar
(3,653 posts)Really love it!