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Copper River: A Novel [Paperback]

William Kent Krueger
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Book Description

Aug 11 2009 Cork O'Connor
Two-time Anthony Award-winning author William Kent Krueger has "moved to the head of the crime fiction class" (Chicago Sun-Times) with his gripping series featuring Sheriff Cork O'Connor. In Copper River, Cork is running for his life -- and straight into a murderous conspiracy involving teenage runaways.

Desperately avoiding the clutches of professional hit men who have already put a bullet in his leg, Cork finds sanctuary outside the small Michigan town of Bodine. But while he's hiding out in an old resort owned by his cousin Jewell DuBois, a bitter widow with a fourteen-year-old son named Ren, the body of a young girl surfaces along the banks of the Copper River -- and then another teenager vanishes. Instead of thwarting his assassins, Cork focuses on tracking a ring of killers who prey on innocent children -- before anyone else falls victim. But as his deadly followers close in, Cork realizes he's made an error any good man might make -- and it may be his last.


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From Publishers Weekly

On the run from anonymous contract killers, ex-sheriff Cork O'Connor goes to ground in a remote corner of Michigan's Upper Peninsula in Krueger's subdued sixth thriller. In the 10 days since the end of Mercy Falls (2005), Cork has picked up a gunshot wound to the leg. His widowed veterinarian cousin, Jewell DuBois, is able to install a Penrose drain, leaving Cork largely immobilized. Cork's friend, security specialist Dina Willner, appears to watch his back, yet most of the plot shifts away from potential shootouts with hit men to Jewell's 13-year-old son, Ren; Ren's tomboy pal, Charlie; and the corpse of a teenage girl found floating in the Copper River. As usual, Krueger conveys a solid sense of place, the woodlands near the shore of Lake Superior, northwest out of Marquette, "where scenes from Anatomy of a Murder had been filmed." But the segue to the familiar children-in-peril theme feels like a cop-out, especially since the previous, superior novel had primed readers for something more intense and harrowing. (Aug.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist

The sixth Cork O'Connor mystery finds the Minnesota sheriff on the run from hired killers. With a bullet wound in his leg, he makes it to the small town of Bodine, where he hides out with his cousin. But Cork's convalescence is cut short by a murderous child-runaway conspiracy, not to mention his cousin's teenage son, who's so desperate for a father figure that he thinks Cork would be a likely candidate. This series gets darker and more elegantly written with every book. Minnesota has a become a hotbed of hard-boiled crime fiction, and the Cork O'Connor novels are among the best. David Pitt
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Most helpful customer reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars A story continued Dec 12 2011
By CGP TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
Let me say first off that Krueger's done it again. I couldn't put the book down, partly because of wanting to see the resolution of what starts in Mercy Falls. As I said in my review of Mercy Falls, the character description of the Jacobys is a tad problematic, and it continues here. The female character introduced in Mercy Falls plays a major part and the suggestion continues that she might become more for Cork than an ally in his investigations. What happens to Jo in Mercy Falls is left unresolved, which niggles at one. But yet again, I couldn't put the book down and read it in a day, anxiously looking forward to reading the next one. All in all, Copper River is better than Mercy Falls, but you really have to read them all and it's important you read them in order.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Compelling, Small Town Suspense Nov 15 2007
By Debra Purdy Kong TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Mass Market Paperback
Recovering from a gunshot wound to his thigh and hiding from a contract killer, Sheriff Cork O'Connor feels pretty useless these days. He can barely walk out of his cousin Jewell's cabin without collapsing. Not a good situation when cougar tracks are found among the cabins and local teens are either missing, critically injured, or dead over a one-week span in this small town. Cork's worries turn to fear when Jewell's son, Ren, and his friend, Charlie (short for Charlene), see a body in the river and soon realize someone's after them. Trouble mounts as the town's local reporter learns Cork's identity and the reason he's come to Bodine.

William Kent Krueger's Copper River is a suspenseful, elegantly written story about family and loss and one man's attempt to do the right thing. The right thing, however, might be the wrong thing and this is partly why the novel is so suspenseful. Another reason is that the reader knows something the main characters don't, a strategy that works well in a book that has few chase scenes or shoot-em-up action to ramp up the excitement. In fact, Bodine's slow pace adds another layer of tension as the adults try to figure out what's really going on before another teen is killed.

The author's vivid narrative descriptions, great dialogue, and strong portrayal of psychological turmoil make this a truly compelling story. My only quibble is the predictable timing of the cougar's appearance. Still, Copper River is a terrific read.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.3 out of 5 stars  45 reviews
21 of 23 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Enthralling conclusion to Mercy Falls Aug 24 2006
By carl brookins - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
In the spirit of full disclosure, I report that Kent is a fellow member of the Minnesota Crime Wave, as well as the critique group I belong to, and we are friends. Having said that, let me assure you that this is a dynamite book. Another in the fine Cork O'Connor series. Those who have read Mercy Falls will naturally want this book since it completes the arc that begins with the previous book. Nevertheless, Copper River is complete within its own covers.

But there is considerably more here than resolution to the turmoil conjured up in Mercy Falls. O'Connor, wounded by a professional killer, goes to ground in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan with distant relatives in an uncomfortable situation. Family relationships are always an important part of Krueger's novels. This book also explores some horrific circumstances that effectively demonstrate that our often common view of bucolic small-town life is sometimes at serious odds with reality.

O'Connor, fearing for his family, has taken refuge with the widow of a man he once arrested. While he heals he is drawn inexorably into the life of his nephew and the boy's interesting teen aged companions. That life finally leads to the uncovering of crimes first revealed in one of the most moving open scenes I have ever read in a novel in this or any genre.

Krueger is a fine writer and he knows how to build suspense while telling a good story. But his real strength is in the characters he develops and their interactions. But don't just take the word of this reviewer. Pick up a copy and read the first page. Just the first page. Not the cover copy, or that on the flaps. Just page one. Then decide.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Different Oct 5 2006
By John Bowes - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
A continuation of the last book, that for a while felt like the second of three, until a less than satisfactory conclusion ended that notion. Good page turning action, but less well thought out than usual. Is the author getting tired of Cork?
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars His Best Written Book. But is it his Best? Aug 30 2006
By John E. Mack - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
This is Krueger's best written "Cork" Corcoran mystery. His plot has fewer distractions than his previous efforts and the writing is quite taut. I am not sure it is his best book because the sheer vigor of his good first novel is hard to top, even if it tended to ramble a bit. But there is no wasted writing at all in the current novel, and if there are no "red herrings," neither are there any irrelevant side trips.

The pot finds Corcoran on the run from an aging paterfamilias who has put a price on his head for (as he erroneously believes) killing his son. Corcoran winds up hiding at the Upper Michigan home of a relative who has a young son who comes to idolize him. Some murders occur and the child and his semi-girl friend become targets. Depite his serious injury, Corcoran, with the help of his Wonder-woman ex-FBI agent friend, protect the kids and solve the mystery in a satisfactory way.

The weakest part of the book involves the resolution of the "hit" on Corcoran, particularly the confrontation between him and the Godfather-like senior. Obviously, Krueger wants to get Corcoran back to Minnesota in the worst way, and is willing to use some pretty thin plotting to do it. But overall, it is a fine addition to the Corcoran corpus. It will be good to get him back to his home turf.
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