An Unfortunate Prairie Occurrence: A Jules Clement Mystery
By (Author) Jamie Harrison
Counterpoint
Counterpoint
6th August 2024
2nd July 2024
United States
General
Fiction
813.54
Paperback
448
Width 139mm, Height 209mm
The first two novels in the Jules Clement Mysteries series, The Edge of the Crazies and Going Local, established Jamie Harrison as a preeminent young American writer whose intelligent mysteries rank with the sharpest, most original of new fiction. Fans and critics alike have fallen hard for Jules Clement, the unlikely sheriff of this small town bordering Yellowstone Park, who'd rather be off fishing than giving out tickets. Now it's mid-October in Blue Deer, and Jules is up to his crooked grin in trouble. A camper's discovery of old bones threatens to rip open secrets that have been long and deliberately buried in the hearts and minds of Blue Deer's oldest citizens. Jules begins a casual investigation that mushrooms into a nightmare of long-simmering enmities, love affairs, arson, and murder. Jules must query the local judge, his obnoxious daughter and power-hungry grandson, and even his own family. Served up with the intrigue is Jamie Harrison's eye for local humor and for finely drawn characters- there are Alice, the sharp-tongued director of the ladies' historical society, and Peter, her recalcitrant attorney husband. There's the enigmatic Edie, with whom Jules continues an on-again, off-again affair; and the beauteous Caroline, a new deputy who both intimidates and fascinates Jules. The sexual tension makes the intrigue even more suspenseful, and events culminate in a remarkably surprising climax. Fans of Jamie Harrison's earlier Jules Clement mysteries will love An Unfortunate Prairie Occurrence. The skeletons in the closet are a family affair. When bones are found on an island on the edge of town, it gives Jules a change of pace from gas station robberies and domestic abuse, a series of rapes and errant campers. But the skeleton leads back to old murders and his own family, and strips away illusions about both justice and the people he loves. Set Fall of 1994. The first two novels in the Jules Clement Mysteries series, The Edge of the Crazies and Going Local, established Jamie Harrison as a preeminent young American writer whose intelligent mysteries rank with the sharpest, most original of new fiction. Fans and critics alike have fallen hard for Jules Clement, the unlikely sheriff of this small town bordering Yellowstone Park, who'd rather be off fishing than giving out tickets. Now it's mid-October in Blue Deer, and Jules is up to his crooked grin in trouble. A camper's discovery of old bones threatens to rip open secrets that have been long and deliberately buried in the hearts and minds of Blue Deer's oldest citizens. Jules begins a casual investigation that mushrooms into a nightmare of long-simmering enmities, love affairs, arson, and murder. Jules must query the local judge, his obnoxious daughter and power-hungry grandson, and even his own family. Served up with the intrigue is Jamie Harrison's eye for local humor and for finely drawn characters- there are Alice, the sharp-tongued director of the ladies' historical society, and Peter, her recalcitrant attorney husband. There's the enigmatic Edie, with whom Jules continues an on-again, off-again affair; and the beauteous Caroline, a new deputy who both intimidates and fascinates Jules. The sexual tension makes the intrigue even more suspenseful, and events culminate in a remarkably surprising climax. Fans of Jamie Harrison's earlier Jules Clement mysteries will love An Unfortunate Prairie Occurrence.
JAMIE HARRISON, who has lived in Montana with her family for more than thirty years, has worked as a caterer, a gardener, and an editor, and is the author of The Center of Everything, The Widow Nash, and the four Jules Clement/Blue Deer mysteries- The Edge of the Crazies, Going Local, An Unfortunate Prairie Occurrence, and Blue Deer Thaw. She was awarded the Mountains & Plains Independent Booksellers Association Reading the West Book Award for The Widow Nash, and was a finalist for the High Plains Book Award.