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The Lost Bird (Wind River Reservation Series #5) » (~)

Book cover image of The Lost Bird (Wind River Reservation Series #5) by Margaret Coel

Authors: Margaret Coel
ISBN-13: 9780425170304, ISBN-10: 0425170306
Format: Mass Market Paperback
Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
Date Published: August 2000
Edition: ~

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Author Biography: Margaret Coel

Margaret Coel is the New York Times bestselling, award-winning author of the acclaimed novels featuring Father John O'Malley and Vicky Holden, as well as several works of nonfiction. Originally an historian by trade, she is considered an expert on the Arapaho Indians.

Book Synopsis

Father O'Malley and Arapaho lawyer Vicky Holden must uncover a baby-selling scheme at a clinic forty years ago.

"Suspenseful...Solid characters and a keen sense of place...keep this tale humming."-Publishers Weekly

"Among the best mysteries of the year...Coel is clearly at the top of her game."- Booklist (starred review)

Publishers Weekly

Fr. John O'Malley and attorney Vicky Holden solve a mystery and wrestle with their mutual--and forbidden--attraction in another suspenseful outing (after The Story Teller, 1998). When his elderly assistant is killed on a back road on the Wind River Arapaho Reservation in Wyoming, Father John assumes that he himself was the target, since the dead man was driving his truck and had just stepped out of it when he was shot. Soon, however, he learns that the frail old priest, who once held Father John's current post as head of the St. Francis Mission, came back to the reservation to expose a long-buried crime against the Arapaho people. When Holden, an Arapaho lawyer, hears that a priest has been murdered, she fears the worst, since Sonny Red Wolf, an angry Indian separatist, has often vowed to drive Father John off the reservation. After Holden finds Father John alive, she embarks on her own investigation of the murder. Meanwhile, movie star Sharon David hires Holden to trace her true lineage; she is convinced she was born to Arapaho parents on the reservation and given away for adoption. Holden repeats the local legend--that many Arapaho babies died of a mysterious sickness around the time of Sharon David's birth, so no Arapaho would let a baby go. Probing, however, she uncovers a plot involving a clinic and a famous pediatrician, while Father John, converging on the same plot, confronts the killer. Like many mystery writers working on Native American ground, Coel knows that the gaps between cultures are fertile ground for suspense. She also develops solid characters and a keen sense of place that keep this tale humming. Author tour. (Nov.) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

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