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Desert Wind

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

PI Lena Jones learns that old sins never die; they're still taking lives.

When PI Lena Jones' partner, Pima Indian Jimmy Sisiwan, is arrested in the remote town of Walapai Flats in northern Arizona, Lena closes the Desert Investigations office and rushes to his aid. What she finds is a town up in arms over a new uranium mine located only ten miles from the magnificent Grand Canyon. Jimmy's sister-in-law, founder of Victims of Uranium Mining, has been murdered, but the opposing side has taken hits, too. Ike Donohue, the mine's public relations man, is found shot to death, which casts suspicion on Jimmy and his entire family.

During her investigation, Lena finds not only a community decimated by dangerous mining practices but also a connection to actor John Wayne and the mysterious deaths resulting from the 1953 filming of The Conqueror. Gabe Boone, a wrangler on that doomed film, is still alive, but the only person the aged man will confide in is John Wayne's ghost. It's up to Lena to penetrate Gabe's defenses and uncover the decades-old tragedy that no one in Walapai Flats wants to talk about. By delving into the area's history, Lena discovers the reason that high-ranking government officials want those crimes to remain under wraps.

Desert Wind, like the others in Betty Webb's Lena Jones mystery series, is based on the facts of true-crime cases.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Marguerite Gavin's mature voice and composed cadence are perfectly suited to Webb's distinctive characters: former police officer Lena Jones and Jimmy Sisiwan, partners in Desert Investigations. Gavin also delivers strong portrayals of the Paiute and Navajo Indians, mining officials, and tourists of northwest Arizona. The involving plot elements include a new uranium mine located just 10 miles from the Grand Canyon, which has a tie-in to Hollywood history as well as to the ongoing effects of the nuclear bomb testing that took place in Nevada and Arizona in the 1950s. Gavin moves smoothly from character to character and gender to gender, adding drama and emotional depth to many parts of the story. S.C.A. © AudioFile 2012, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from December 5, 2011
      Webb pulls no punches in exploring another human rights issue in her excellent seventh mystery starring Arizona PI Lena Jones (after 2009’s Desert Lost). Lena follows her Pima Indian partner, Jimmy Sisiwan, to his hometown, Walapai Flats, where his brother, Ted Olmstead, is being held as a material witness in the murder of Ike Donohue, a public relations whiz who represented the soon-to-open Black Basin Uranium Mine. The mine’s owner, Roger Tosches, once operated another mine that years earlier caused many cancer deaths and polluted the Navaho reservation on which it was located. Webb also charts the impact of aboveground testing of atomic bombs in Nevada on Downwinders, those who unknowingly breathed the poisonous air and ate contaminated food. A prickly but perceptive East Coast journalist and a remarkably sophisticated county sheriff help clarify the situation for Lena, who comes to realize she can’t cure all the areas ills. Author tour.

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  • English

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