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Ash Child (The Montana Mysteries Featuring Gabriel Du Pré) Kindle Edition

4.6 out of 5 stars 273 ratings
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In modern-day Montana, brushfires, meth dealers, and murder challenge a deputy in a mystery that’s “a pleasure to read” (Publishers Weekly).
 
In the midst of a drought in Toussaint, Montana, Métis Indian tracker and cattle investigator Gabriel Du Pré learns that Maddy Collins has been killed—and goes looking for answers.
 
Du Pré suspects a pair of boys who, despite their good upbringing, have fallen in with a gang of crystal meth dealers. Not long after the murder, they vanish. As the town is threatened by a forest fire, Du Pré puts his own life at risk to hunt for the two young men, not knowing whether they’re alive or dead. But if the inferno reaches Toussaint, no one will be safe.

Ash Child is the 9th book in The Montana Mysteries Featuring Gabriel Du Pré series, but you may enjoy reading the series in any order.
 

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

This compelling series, set in a contemporary Wild West where little old ladies come into the saloon, order red beers and go home and shoot at meddlesome strangers, offers another success. Gabriel Du Pre (last seen in 2001's Cruzatte and Maria) is back, not in the best of health but as curious and stubborn as ever. An old woman, Maddy Collins (she of the red beers), is beaten to death, and when Du Pre looks into it, he's knocked on the head as well. Two teenagers, good kids who've chosen bad friends, jump out as obvious suspects. The two disappear, which seems to confirm their guilt. With the Montana weather dry and hot, the threat of fire hangs over the area, creating nearly unbearable suspense. Beyond basic safety measures, there's nothing that can be done to guarantee that the Wolf Mountains and all the nearby houses will not go up in flames. Sure enough, fire breaks out. The discovery of the two teenagers' bodies on a burned hill makes it tragically clear that they weren't guilty. As fires spread, the fear of arson spurs Du Pre to further danger in an effort to find the truth. Du Pre's beloved, Madelaine, confers with the wise old Benetsee as Du Pre goes up against the Forest Service. There's a wonderful drawl to the pace here: though there's plenty of action, there's also time to enjoy the laconic, highly nuanced language and to catch up on the interwoven history of these folks in the case of the mysterious, powerful Benetsee, a history may travel back centuries. It's a pleasure to read a story that was clearly written with pleasure.

From Booklist

*Starred Review* Maddy Collins, a reclusive woman on the shady side of 80, is found dead in her little house near Toussaint, Montana, an ax driven halfway through her skull. Gabe Du Pre, part-time fiddler and occasional unofficial deputy, offers to help with the investigation. Suspecting that Maddy's murder has something to do with her house, he decides to watch the place; after seeing two teenagers lurking outside, he is knocked unconscious. When Gabe leaves the hospital, the driest season in years has sparked fires in the nearby Wolf Mountains. The firefighters find the two teenagers in one of the culverts, burned beyond recognition. Gabe is sure the death of Maddy, the two teenagers, and the Wolf Mountain fires are all related, but he will have to call on his Metis Indian magic and generations of pioneer common sense to understand the connection. Plot summaries of Gabe Du Pre novels are inevitably inadequate. Bowen's stories are always well constructed and very intelligent, but they are never about whodunit. Like so many outstanding but wildly different crime series, from James Lee Burke's Dave Robicheaux novels to Steven Havill's Bill Gastner series, the Du Pre stories are about a vanishing way of life and the determined souls who fight a rear-guard action to keep it alive. Du Pre and his Toussaint neighbors represent a proud rural America that resists the technological tsunami engulfing the land; they roll their own smokes, make music while they drink ditch whiskey, value old friends, and are suspicious of strangers. Don't miss them in this dazzling entry in a wonderful series. Wes Lukowsky
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B007AUXQZO
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Open Road Media Mystery & Thriller; 1st edition (March 13, 2012)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ March 13, 2012
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 8.4 MB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 226 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.6 out of 5 stars 273 ratings

About the author

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Peter Bowen
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Peter Bowen (b. 1945) is best known for mystery novels set in the modern American West. He published his first novel, Yellowstone Kelly, in 1987. After two more novels featuring this real-life Western hero, Bowen published Coyote Wind (1994), which introduced Gabriel Du Pré, a mixed-race lawman living in fictional Toussaint, Montana. To date, he has written thirteen Du Pré mysteries. Bowen lives and writes in Livingston, Montana.

Customer reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
273 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers enjoy this mystery series for its creative plots and engaging characters. The book features interesting mysteries, with one customer highlighting the forest fire theme, and customers find it humorous and easy to read. They appreciate the historical elements, with one review noting the great blend of Native American ways and values.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

11 customers mention "Story quality"11 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the story quality of the book series, with one customer highlighting its creative twists and another noting its historical content about Montana.

"...There are great characters and creatively twisted plots and lots and lots of history, legend and archaeological facts and trivia...." Read more

"...I did think Ash Child was a good story because it raised the issue of how children are led and misled by adults...." Read more

"...Pretty good history of Montana, good music, hard drinking...." Read more

"...The author draws you in with intrigue, wit and messages from "the old people." I will definitely read more by Peter Bowen." Read more

10 customers mention "Character development"10 positive0 negative

Customers love the characters in the book, with one mentioning how the author adds a twist to make old characters new.

"Peter Bowen has created a fabulous, fictional world. There are great characters and creatively twisted plots and lots and lots of history, legend..." Read more

"I can't say enough about this series. The characters are so real. They make you laugh and cry. You hate to see each novel end...." Read more

"...give only 4 stars because the plots are seldom tight, but the characters are memorable, and I intend to read them all." Read more

"This was my first Peter Bowen novel and it was awesome! I loved the characters and I got to learn about the Metis people...." Read more

7 customers mention "Mystery content"7 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the mysteries in the book, with one customer particularly appreciating the story about forest fires.

"...and lots and lots of history, legend and archaeological facts and trivia...." Read more

"Another great book! Lots of forest burning in this book. Just so sad ... all those trees, wildlife, some cabins...." Read more

"Perhaps my favorite Montana mystery to date. I have been reading them in order and found them all to be entertaining...." Read more

"...They are formulaic and repetitious across books. The mysteries themselves are interesting, but not overly complicated...." Read more

6 customers mention "Readability"6 positive0 negative

Customers find the book to be a good read.

"...All these books are a treasure. 🙏..." Read more

"Peter Bows. Is a great read . You are challenged to adapt to the metis still of speaking english...." Read more

"All of this series is a venture in reading. Peter tells a great story in the vernacular of the Matis." Read more

"Good read..." Read more

5 customers mention "Humor"5 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the humor in the book, finding it laugh-out-loud funny.

"...The characters are so real. They make you laugh and cry. You hate to see each novel end...." Read more

"...She's fantastic, of course, ha ha! She makes me laugh out loud...." Read more

"...I have been reading them in order and found them all to be entertaining...." Read more

"...The author draws you in with intrigue, wit and messages from "the old people." I will definitely read more by Peter Bowen." Read more

3 customers mention "History"3 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the historical elements in the book, with one review highlighting the Metis people's history, while another notes the great blend of Native American ways and values.

"...twisted plots and lots and lots of history, legend and archaeological facts and trivia...." Read more

"...Them the story itself is a great blend of Native American ways and values and those of the folks around them. I am soon going to read number 10...." Read more

"This terrific murder mystery series evokes Montana, the history of the Metis people and is brim full of wonderful characters...." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on December 9, 2022
    Peter Bowen has created a fabulous, fictional world. There are great characters and creatively twisted plots and lots and lots of history, legend and archaeological facts and trivia. Really well researched and thoughtfully pulled together, it’s very hard to put down. I can’t get enough!
  • Reviewed in the United States on August 3, 2004
    I was so puzzled by this book's ending, I picked up the Gabriel Du Pre mystery that comes after it ("Badlands") and read it just to see if it clarified "Ash Child."

    It didn't.

    It is frustrating to read even a good author like Bowen, when he winds down the end of a mystery without explaining exactly who the villain is, and why he committed his villainies.

    Dang, Peter, I've felt like I've just been dragged through a seance in the sweat lodge with the inscrutable Benetsee. Maybe the solution will come to me in a dream.

    Meanwhile the Forest Service comes out of this book nearly as whupped as the readers. Bowen relishes taking on any bunch that restricts the freedom of Montanans, including environmentalists in "Wolf, No Wolf," Yuppie tourists in "Cruzatte and Maria," and the FBI in nearly all of his Gabriel Du Pre mysteries. This time the Forest Service comes under attack for not managing its land correctly and for preventing the ranchers from bulldozing fire breaks on their own property. Smokey the Bear's green-shirts endure some pretty scatological commentary, especially after one of them tries to make Du Pre put out his cigarette.

    It's the author who's a'growlin and a'prowlin in "Ash Child."

    Even Bowen's serial detective, Gabriel Du Pre takes a beating. In this book, he busts his appendix, gets his head dented in, is zapped by a taser, and is nearly burned alive. If you've ever fantasized about living the good life in rugged Montana, you should read all of Bowen's Du Pre mysteries before making your move. Newcomers and old hands alike die by avalanche and grizzly, by gunshot and knife, and by freezing to death in Alberta Clippers. They are burned to death in forest fires and poisoned by evil industrial magnates. It's a tough life even for a tough Metis brand inspector like Du Pre.

    In spite of all my negative commentary, if you are already a Du Pre fan you should read "Ash Child." The Big Sky Country is choked by the smoke and ash of deliberately-set forest fires as Bowen's laconic detective sets out (between stays in the hospital) to discover who murdered an old woman with a single, vicious hatchet chop. Do not let yourself be deflected by plot elaborations involving arsonists, drug dealers, and meth addicts. Concentrate on Du Pre's patient tracking of the murderer of old Maddy Collins, and you will find "Ash Child" to be a very satisfying read.
    9 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on January 4, 2020
    I can't say enough about this series. The characters are so real. They make you laugh and cry. You hate to see each novel end. This time Madelaine, Du Pre's girlfriend, is the heroine of the story and Du Pre spends most of his time being beaten up, hit on the head, and trying to avoid being in the hospital. Someone has killed an old woman and the Wolf Mountains are engulfed in forest fires in the summer heat. You can smell, see, and hear Montana's rural people in this great series.
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on July 16, 2021
    Another great book! Lots of forest burning in this book. Just so sad ... all those trees, wildlife, some cabins. Madeleine takes the lead that duPre` normally takes, so this had a different feel to it. She's fantastic, of course, ha ha! She makes me laugh out loud. As I read each book a little movie plays in my mind, but I know that no movie could do these books justice. Thank you, Peter Bowen, I can see you in my thoughts telling stories in the afterlife. All these books are a treasure. 🙏
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on October 3, 2014
    I have read all the Du Pre novels in order, and I need to comment on the reviews of others who think the mysteries end without a clear and definite resolution. In my opinion, that is just a reflection of the concept that time just keeps on passing. Du Pre is always commenting about time, the history of his Metis people, the changes in the earth, how people change over time. Time is constant and never stops. The only resolution is that there will be another time to come. What I have noticed is that Bowen does not write as eloquently about "white" people as he does about the Metis. The whites are rascals and boring compared to Du Pre and Benetsee and Madeleine. I did think Ash Child was a good story because it raised the issue of how children are led and misled by adults. It described how people cope with tragedies in helpful and destructive ways. It reinforced how we all need friends and family to live better. There is much to learn by just slowing down and thinking as Benetsee leads Du Pre to do.
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on November 25, 2013
    I love these books, I live in them while I'm reading. I give only 4 stars because the plots are seldom tight, but the characters are memorable, and I intend to read them all.
  • Reviewed in the United States on February 22, 2023
    Perhaps my favorite Montana mystery to date. I have been reading them in order and found them all to be entertaining. I have had some limited experience with forest fires so perhaps this book is just a little closer to home.
  • Reviewed in the United States on March 4, 2017
    I am a fan of Peter Bowen's Montana Mysteries, with (now retired) brand inspector and Metis musician Gabriel du Pre and his community. Du Pre is a simple man in the best sense of the word – the best and quickest way to get to the heart of a situation (or of a person) is to look past the extraneous stuff and concentrate on the basics.

    In Ash Child, du Pre must deal with the driest weather conditions that his community has faced in 100 years, and with the inevitable wildfires that come with it. He must also deal with some unexplained deaths, including an elderly woman on the edges of the community and of a pair of high school sweethearts who will never know if their relationship would last past graduation. Who is killing these people – is it an outsider, or a local, or is it the result of multiple murders for multiple causes? And just how IS the government's efforts to fight the wildfires going, and will it interfere with the murder investigation?

    Not my favorite book in the series to date – but close. Highly recommended.

    RATING: 5 stars.
    One person found this helpful
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