First Line: As she watched the shivering band set up to play the farmers market at the corner of Kickapoo and Main, Bad Axe County sheriff Heidi Kick found herself counting days again.
Bad Axe County, Wisconsin, is gearing up for Sheriff Heidi Kick's favorite time of year: the Syttende Mai Festival celebrating the area's Scandinavian heritage. It's been a rough time for the sheriff; her husband is extremely vocal about the hours she works, and her seven-year-old daughter, Opie (Ophelia), is being just as vocal about a personal matter that has both parents concerned.
But Sheriff Heidi Kick has just discovered that something is deeply wrong in her county, and no one is more determined than she to make this area a safe place to live. A migrant worker is found savagely beaten, and a beloved member of the local oom-pah band is murdered. As Heidi investigates, she finds a secret world of cage fighting, White Nationalists congregating... for what?... and then she's faced with a choice that no woman would ever want to face.
This is going to be a memorable Syttende Mai Festival, to say the least.
~
In Dead Man Dancing, John Galligan has once again found the perfect mix of characters, setting, story, and action to keep me absorbed from first page to last. These harder-edged Bad Axe County books show how no part of the country is safe from crime-- even rural areas with rugged and remote terrain. In this second book, readers are confronted with White Nationalists and the resulting rhetoric these people like to spout as well as the senseless hate crimes that follow them.
Dead Man Dancing isn't always an easy book to read. White Nationalists can make my blood pressure spike faster than almost anything else, but Galligan's characters and story-telling ability are so good that I had to keep reading to find out how everything would be resolved.
Now about these characters... Sheriff Heidi Kick has a new deputy from Texas who's slowly teaching her Spanish. I'm looking forward to seeing more of him in future books. On the surface, Heidi's husband, Harley, seems to be the usual spouse who hates sharing his partner with the demands of law enforcement, but readers get to see him in a different light in this book. He is not a two-dimensional man. Neither are his and Heidi's reactions to the demands of their daughter, Opie, and that's another situation I'm looking forward to seeing move along in the next book.
Even secondary characters have lives of their own in Dead Man Dancing. Some residents show us how some people can live their lives wearing blinders while others show us how-- after being kicked over and over again while they're down-- they can make one bad decision after another. The real question for these people is-- will they always make the wrong choice?
One of my favorite quotes in the book came when Heidi-- almost dead on her feet from exhaustion-- is told by her dispatcher to go home and get some rest. Heidi's response? "You know what happens if I go home? As soon as I get there, right about the time I get this uniform off, you call me." This is just one of the many reasons why I was never cut out for a life in law enforcement, and it was good to see the sheriff spell it out so bluntly and truthfully.
There are so many reasons to like this book, and one of them is how skillfully Galligan weaves area history into the narrative. This part of Wisconsin had former slaves move in, and one of them was known for building round barns. Not only was this bit of history fascinating but it added depth to both the story and one of Galligan's characters.
John Galligan's Bad Axe County mysteries may tackle uncomfortable subjects, but his story-telling abilities and the characters he populates the county with will always keep me coming back for more. I've encountered few law enforcement officers as dedicated as Heidi Kick to keeping their jurisdictions safe, and that's just the sort of character I like to read about.
Dead Man Dancing by John Galligan
eISBN: 9781982110758
Atria Books © 2020
eBook, 304 pages
Police Procedural, #2 Bad Axe County mystery
Rating: A
Source: Net Galley
I love that line about being overworked, too, Cathy! You have a gift for sharing series that I haven't tried, but should, and this is one of them. It makes me ask myself, 'Why on earth haven't I started this series yet?!' Oh, well, lots of books and not nearly enough time to read them all. Still, I'm marking this one down. It sounds as though Heidi is a very real person, and the plot sounds intriguing.
ReplyDeleteI really like Heidi, and I think you will, too, Margot.
DeleteSigh...Another series to add to my list. I'm never going to catch up!
ReplyDeleteI gave up trying to do that a couple of decades ago.
DeleteThere are some hard subjects in this one, but Heidi Kick does sound like a character I would like.
ReplyDeleteI think you'd like her, too.
DeleteI love hearing about this series that takes place not far from my home. It is so true, that no part of the country is safe from crime. It seems that this author does a good job of bringing the area to life.
ReplyDeleteHe does. I'm learning quite a bit about an area that I didn't even know existed a year ago.
DeleteI just happen to have Bad Axe County checked out from my library right now :)
ReplyDeleteYay!
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