Reviews for Endangered

by C J Box

Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

His 15th outing finds Wyoming game warden Joe Pickett home in Twelve Sleep County collecting dead sage grouse when he receives notice that his adopted daughter, April, has been dumped on a rural road and is near death. Her boyfriend Dallas Cates is a suspect, but there are other possibilities, and the Cates family is obstructing the investigation for reasons Pickett can't figure out. In this chilling mystery, filled with federal agency and law enforcement complications and threats to everyone Joe holds dear, Box is at the top of his form with tight plotting, realistic characters, and plenty of detection. David Chandler turns in a brilliant performance as the voice of Pickett. Verdict Both mystery fans and those who enjoy adventure stories will love this series. ["The nonstop action, intermingling plotlines, and the return of familiar characters mesh into a breathless, roller-coaster ride of sheer suspense and entertainment": LJ 2/15/15 review of the Putnam hc.]-Janet Martin, Southern Pines P.L., NC © Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.


Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

In the 15th novel of Box's best-selling series (after Stone Cold) Wyoming game warden Joe Pickett and his family face the fear of losing their 18-year-old adopted daughter, April, who has been badly beaten and abandoned in a ditch. While Marybeth waits at her bedside in a Billings hospital, Joe tracks April's assailant. His chief suspect is rodeo cowboy Dallas Cates, who ran off with April just four months prior. Although another man is arrested, Joe can't ignore the Cates family, led by matriarch Brenda, who, as Joe discovers, will do anything to protect her family, and especially her favorite child. Intertwined in the unfolding drama is the mysterious killing of a flock, or lek, of sage grouse-a species under consideration for listing as endangered; something many Wyomingites, including Governor Rulon, oppose because it would stop or slow energy development in the state. VERDICT Series fans will love this thriller. The nonstop action, intermingling plotlines, and the return of familiar characters all mesh into a breathless, roller-coaster ride of sheer suspense and entertainment. [See Prepub Alert, 9/22/14.]-Patricia Ann Owens, formerly with Illinois Eastern Community Colls., Mt. Carmel (c) Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.


Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

The 15th novel to feature Joe Pickett (after Stone Cold) opens with the Wyoming game warden facing the apparently senseless slaughter of dozens of young sage grouse, a problem he quickly moves to the back burner when he's told his 18-year-old adopted daughter, April, has been found beaten and left to die on a road near his hometown of Saddlestring. Narrator Chandler's rendition of the book's expository sections is precise and professionally delivered but unemotional to a fault, undercutting the vivid and propulsive quality of the author's prose. However, when it comes to bringing the book's characters to life, Chandler's Broadway (Death of Salesman) and TV experience (Law and Order) kick in. The wheelchair-bound Sheriff Reed sounds thoughtful and just, a hard man to rile, while prosecutor Schawk is as tightly coiled as Box describes her. Providing Joe with a deep, leading man's voice, Chandler takes it through a series of emotional changes, from love for his daughter and fear for her safety to full-out fury when he eventually confronts the book's collection of truly monstrous villains. A Putnam hardcover. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

Is there a crime-fiction family as fully fleshed out as Joe Pickett's? In singing the praises of Box's series featuring the Wyoming game warden, we often praise the plotting, pacing, and the down-to-earth hero's friendship with force-of-nature Nate Romanowski. But Pickett's supporting cast wife Marybeth and daughters Sheridan, Lucy, and April lends a continuity and grounding to this series that sets it apart from all the lone-wolf stuff out there. And it's the adopted, troubled April who gets the fifteenth Pickett novel off to a troubling start when she's found beaten and unconscious in a ditch. Joe is sure he knows who did it but must reconcile his desire for immediate revenge with the sheriff's insistence on a by-the-book investigation. Meanwhile, the FBI is using Nate as bait to catch his fugitive former employer, and, despite it all, Joe must investigate a politically charged sage-grouse slaughter. As they often do, things get western, with the carefully constructed plot building to a breathless, thrilling end. And Joe's family, battered and bruised, carries on. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Box will be touring in person and over satellite radio, backed by the usual promotional blitz in print, electronic, and social media but his hungry fans will already have this book on hold at the library.--Graff, Keir Copyright 2015 Booklist


Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

In bestseller Box's solid 15th novel featuring Joe Picket (after 2014's Stone Cold), the Wyoming game warden faces a crime far too close to home. The sheriff tells him that his foster daughter, April, has been beaten and left for dead in a ditch; Joe's reaction to the alarming news is an unequivocal "I'm going to kill Dallas Cates," a dazzling local rodeo champion last seen running off with April. As April lies in a medically induced coma, Joe has to balance his personal crisis with an environmental one: finding the poachers who slaughtered a flock of 21 sage grouse, a species approaching endangered status. Meanwhile, the FBI is tracking the every move of Joe's old friend Nate Romanowski, who went on the run in Stone Cold. Some of the plot devices stretch credulity, and the dialogue isn't as crisp as usual, but the story carries the day. Agent: Ann Rittenberg, Ann Rittenberg Literary Agency. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Wyoming game warden Joe Pickett's 15th case takes him through some of the darkest days of his checkered career.While Joe's surveying a field in which someone massacred a flock of endangered sage grouse, he gets a call that a young woman's been found in a ditch, badly beaten. Maybe it's not Joe's adopted daughter, April, who ran off with rodeo rider Dallas Cates shortly after her 18th birthday (Stone Cold, 2014). But Joe and his librarian wife, Marybeth, know it is, and of course they're right. Eldon and Brenda Cates insist that Dallas got much too badly banged up at a Houston rodeo to have lifted a hand against April, with whom he'd already split up. Although April, lying in a medically induced coma, is in no position to dispute their story, Joe's ready to kill Dallas himselfuntil an anonymous tip identifies survivalist Tilden Cudmore as April's abductor. Certainly everything about Cudmore's behavior, especially when he's confronted by the law, indicates that he fits the bill. While Joe is still wondering which of the suspects is really guilty, his old pal Nate Romanowski, the outlaw falconer last seen giving evidence against murder-for-hire kingpin Wolfgang Templeton, is released from prison, made to sign away most of his civil rights into the bargain, and lured into a lethal ambush and left for dead. Who's responsible for his shooting? What have they done with his lover and business partner, Liv Brannan? And what hope does Joe have of solving such a range of felonies, especially those that hit closest to home? All the action and suspense of Box's long string of high-country adventures, with a solution that's considerably tighter and more satisfying than most of them. One of Joe's best. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.