Review: Cold Wind by C.J. Box

Title: Cold Wind

Author: C J Box

Published: Corvus March 2011 ( Australian release: Allen & Unwin Jan 2012)

Synopsis: When Earl Alden is found dead, dangling from a wind turbine, it’s his wife, Missy, who is arrested. Unfortunately for Joe Pickett, Missy is his mother-in- law, a woman he dislikes heartily, and now he doesn’t know what to do-especially when the early signs point to her being guilty as sin.  But then things happen to make Joe wonder: Is Earl’s death what it appears to be? Is Missy being set up? He has the county DA and sheriff on one side, his wife on the other, his estranged friend Nate on a lethal mission of his own, and some powerful interests breathing down his neck. Whichever way this goes… it’s not going to be good

Status: Read from January 17 to 18, 2012 — I own a copy  (Courtesy Allen & Unwin)

My Thoughts:

Cold Wind is an enjoyable mystery/thriller set in the wilds of Wyoming, Joe Pickett is a game warden who reluctantly finds himself investigating the death of his father in law, Earl Alden. The local police immediately arrest his mother in law, Missy and while Joe i snot averse to seeing the woman locked up, it seems unlikely she shot her husband, carelessly leaving the gun covered in prints in her car, and then hauled her husband’s body 250ft in the air to hang him from the blades of his own wind turbine. Investigating on his own puts Joe at odds with the local law enforcement and DA, and without his long time friend Nate to back him up, Joe is at risk of getting in over his head.

Identifying the killer in this tightly plotted mystery isn’t easy as CJ Box presents several suspects. Earl Alden, a wealthy man had alienated many of his neighbors in his pursuit of land, had few friends to speak of and when Joe starts poking around he discovers there is something not quite right with the multi million dollar wind farm project Earl was building in a far corner of his ranch.
Bud Longbreak, Missy’s ex husband, started drinking when Missy left him to join Earl, taking his family ranch with her. It seems he is the state’s star witness insisting Missy is responsible for the murder. As bitter about the loss of the family fortune is Bud’s some who has slipped into town virtually unnoticed.
Joe can’t easily dismiss Missy either, his mother in law is the most manipulative and cold-hearted woman he has ever known but with his wife, MaryBeth, distraught at her mother’s arrest he hopes the truth will prove her innocent.
With clever misdirection, CJ Box puts all of the suspects in the frame at one time or another but just as one scenario seems most likely, an alternative is offered. Revealing the killer is, if not completely unexpected, a triumph of sorts for Joe.
Cold Wind touches on several personal issues for Joe, while happy to be back in Saddlestring – his ‘punishment’ ended the Pickett family are struggling financially in the aftermath of the GFC and Joe’s demotion, their foster daughter seems determined to make trouble and their oldest daughter is starting her first year at college. Joe’s estrangement from close friend Nate, after a disagreement in [book:Nowhere to Run|7187391] is also troubling him.
Nate provides the secondary plot for this book. He is forced out of hiding after a murderous attack on his mountain refuge and the falconer, once an elite soldier, will stop at nothing to get his revenge but his vendetta may make him vulnerable to an even greater threat.

With strong characterisation, plenty of action and a complex mystery to solve, Cold Wind is an entertaining read. Despite Cold Wind being the 11th installment in the Joe Pickett series and the only title I have read, I felt the story stood alone on it’s own merit. I do think being familiar with the history of the characters would have enhanced my satisfaction with the book, instead I am simply tempted to pick up this series from the beginning.

Available To Purchase

In Australia: @ Boomerang Books I @ Booktopia I @ Fishpond

International: @ Amazon I @ Book Depository

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