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Witch Cradle

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"Hills' latest John McIntire adventure is dark, dense, and delicious—and musn't be rushed."—Booklist STARRED review

January, 1951: America is in the grip of war in Korea, the threat of nuclear annihilation looms, and Senator Joe McCarthy has begun his Red Scare. But the residents of St. Adele, Michigan, are more concerned with staying warm and shoveling snow until a bizarre ice storm brings down a towering pine. Entangled in its roots is evidence that leads Constable John McIntire to the abandoned farmstead of a young Finnish-American couple who had supposedly left the community years before to help build a workers' Utopia in the Soviet republic of Karelia. There he discovers two bodies, buried sixteen years in an unused cistern.

In his zeal to uncover the truth, McIntire brings the scrutiny—and the suspicion—of a Red-hunting government agent upon his neighbors and himself. Then a part of the past he hoped to bury forever threatens to destroy his new life.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 30, 2006
      Constable John McIntire, Sheriff Pete Koski and their neighbors in St. Adele, a small town on Michigan's Upper Peninsula, must deal with the effects of isolation and far-away political events in Hills's absorbing third mystery (after 2004's Hunter's Dance
      ). One January night in 1951, an ice storm has the hardy residents of St. Adele on edge, but it's the discovery of two human skeletons in a cistern on the farm that once belonged to Rose and Teddy Falk that really upsets everyone. The couple were thought to have resettled in Soviet Karelia with other ethnic Finns in 1934, lured by the promise of a worker's paradise. Now it appears they never left. Many of those Finns later returned, disillusioned, to the U.S., and FBI agent Melvin Fratelli fears Communist spies are lurking even in this remote community. As McIntire investigates, complicated family intrigues rise to the surface and lives change irrevocably. Unidentified news squibs before each chapter help place this illuminating tale in the context of the McCarthy era.

    • Library Journal

      March 1, 2006
      It is 1951 in the tiny village of St. Adele on Michigan -s Upper Peninsula. Constable John McIntire ("Hunter -s Dance" discovers in a well the skeletons of a woman and a man who supposedly immigrated to the Soviet Union in 1934. To make sense of these deaths, he must dig into the pasts of most of the people he knows. Hills uses the anti-Communist sentiment of the Cold War era, the historical facts regarding the Finns who returned to Soviet Karelia, and McIntire -s secret past to drive the story to its unexpected conclusion. Hills lives in Duluth, MN, and northern Scotland.

      Copyright 2006 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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