Youre reading a funambulist, a daredevil performer, a consummate circus act, a writer capable of walking the tightrope of two societies with a stylish high-heel on one foot and a beaded moccasin on the other.
I love Margaret Coels writing because theres never a misplaced step. She balances two opposing cultures with little room for compromise, which is good because this chick works without a safety net.
Its human nature, or certainly the nature of writers, to analyze anothers work when reading it, in an attempt to take the story apart like an acrobatic trickkick off your shoes and try it out. Every once in a while you second guess them and follow them out onto that tightrope just to find where they mightve slipped up, but Margaret never does and just when you think she has shell turn and wink, so keep reading.
Like Catherine McLeod, the reporter protagonist of Man Found Dead in Park, Margaret embraces both the mainstream and native cultures, all the while maintaining the aspect of her writing that transcends the genre with a deep understanding of human nature. When a man is found dead in an Indian section of Denver where no one is talking, McLeod finds herself in conflict with Mexican drug cartels and an investigation that leads north into Wyoming's Wind River Reservation and what turns out to be her roots. Transformative for both McLeod and the reader, the width and breath of the story is easy to miss, because Coels writing has a heady narrative that holds a sense of wonder and romancea place that a lot of other writers fear to tread.
I sometimes wonder if she knows how good she is, but I think probably not. The humility of a few artists is what keeps them grounded, and even when shes out there flying high, Im pretty sure she has her head up but is feeling every twitch of the story through the soles of her feet. Navigating with the finesse of a Flying Wallenda, Coel never misses a thing, because the devil is in the details, and like her character, Detective Nick Bustamante, Margaret knows that these indiscernible little slights of hand are the thing that makes for great drama under the Big Top.
So join Margaret Coel out onto that high wire where she works without a safety net. Just when you think youve got it all figured out there will be moments of insecurity, thoughts that will disconcert, and you might be tempted to look down, but dont. If things get too hairy just reach out and take this daredevil performers hand, and shell grin that signature smile and make sure you make it back to safety. --Craig Johnson
Genre: Mystery
I love Margaret Coels writing because theres never a misplaced step. She balances two opposing cultures with little room for compromise, which is good because this chick works without a safety net.
Its human nature, or certainly the nature of writers, to analyze anothers work when reading it, in an attempt to take the story apart like an acrobatic trickkick off your shoes and try it out. Every once in a while you second guess them and follow them out onto that tightrope just to find where they mightve slipped up, but Margaret never does and just when you think she has shell turn and wink, so keep reading.
Like Catherine McLeod, the reporter protagonist of Man Found Dead in Park, Margaret embraces both the mainstream and native cultures, all the while maintaining the aspect of her writing that transcends the genre with a deep understanding of human nature. When a man is found dead in an Indian section of Denver where no one is talking, McLeod finds herself in conflict with Mexican drug cartels and an investigation that leads north into Wyoming's Wind River Reservation and what turns out to be her roots. Transformative for both McLeod and the reader, the width and breath of the story is easy to miss, because Coels writing has a heady narrative that holds a sense of wonder and romancea place that a lot of other writers fear to tread.
I sometimes wonder if she knows how good she is, but I think probably not. The humility of a few artists is what keeps them grounded, and even when shes out there flying high, Im pretty sure she has her head up but is feeling every twitch of the story through the soles of her feet. Navigating with the finesse of a Flying Wallenda, Coel never misses a thing, because the devil is in the details, and like her character, Detective Nick Bustamante, Margaret knows that these indiscernible little slights of hand are the thing that makes for great drama under the Big Top.
So join Margaret Coel out onto that high wire where she works without a safety net. Just when you think youve got it all figured out there will be moments of insecurity, thoughts that will disconcert, and you might be tempted to look down, but dont. If things get too hairy just reach out and take this daredevil performers hand, and shell grin that signature smile and make sure you make it back to safety. --Craig Johnson
Genre: Mystery
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