Â
Meanwhile, hoards of protestors are showing up over a proposed oil pipeline through the reservation, people from outside the area who are being trucked in and paid to create havoc. As the body count rises, Sheriff Mac Sterling and the reservation police chief, Red Bull, have their hands full, as neither the tribe nor the county have the manpower to keep things from getting out of hand.
Â
Ben gets recruited to help but soon finds his world rocked to the core with the revelation of the darkest secret from his own past.
Â
Â
Praise for Susan Slater and the Ben Pecos mystery series:
âThis is a wonderful book with loveable heroes.â â Library Journal, (on The Pumpkin Seed Massacre)
Â
âSusan Slaterâs Thunderbird is a witty, absorbing tale.â âPublishers Weekly
Â
âSlater effectively combines an appealing mix of new and existing characters âĻ dry humor; crackling suspense; and a surprise ending.â âBooklist
Â
ââĻ a gripping novel. We mystery lovers hope itâs the first of many.â â Tony Hillerman
Â
âA solid, suspenseful narrative and colorful glimpses of Native American life strongly recommend this âĻâ â Library Journal (on Thunderbird)
Â
ââĻ Ben Pecosâraised far from New Mexicoâs Tewa Puebloâcould become as lasting a fictional presence as Joe Leaphorn and Jim Chee.â â Chicago Tribune
Kansas native Susan Slater lived in New Mexico for thirty-nine years. Her Southwest mystery novels reflect her extensive knowledge of the tribes and pueblo culture in the area. As an educator she directed the Six Sandoval Teacher Education Program for the All Indian Pueblo Council through the University of New Mexico. She taught creative writing for UNM and the University of Phoenix. She retired to Florida to write full time, continuing her Ben Pecos and Dan Mahoney mysteries, along with the occasional stand alone novel. Visit her website at susansslater.com