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Book Review: Blue Heaven, a mystery thriller from CJ Box, a story that will keep readers reading

Review: CJ Box’s Blue Heaven… In this mystery set in northern Idaho, CJ Box has assembled a diverse cast of characters, including:

A tough and headstrong rancher who is trying to save his family’s once-thriving estate from creditors.

A UPS driver dating the mother of two missing children

A rural mail carrier who longs to be the center of attention, even if she has to be a little fanciful with the stories she tells.

Mysterious men spied on by a young woman who gives them made-up names: Driver, Man in Baseball Cap, Dark Man, and Wavy-Haired Man.

The driver of a red van who may or may not be the salvation of two young people

A banker who finally understands the shocking consequences of his decisions.

Retired LAPD police officers who seem to find this area perfect for their “final resting place”

The local sheriff, a guy weak at the knees, who takes the easy way out, no matter what damage he may cause.

A volunteer search group, which includes some volunteers who are up to no good.

Box weaves these characters and many others, both two-legged and four-legged, into a suspenseful, uncompromising, unsentimental story. which, in the manner of a well-plotted hard mystery, has both good and evil built into its characters. Although we are on the outside looking in, and see the various threads that are woven into this mystery, it is not easy to separate the good from the bad, and the reader is pushed back and forth between him-he-he. did-that-and-not-she-did almost from the opening scenes.

Jess, his central character, isn’t playing rancher; he’s the hard-working owner of a working ranch, like his father and grandfather before him, and he has no intention of giving up and walking away, letting his land be used for purposes he cannot accept. He leads a hard and lonely life these days, making difficult decisions that circumstances impose on him.

Still, the reader soon sees Jess for who she is: one of the good guys, the really good guys, always trying to make decisions based on what’s best for everyone in whatever situation they find themselves in. But Jess is surrounded by corruption and venality, something he can see and feel, something well hidden, that exists in people he should be able to trust.

He soon discovers that he must take a step, make a decision that could change his life. and that of two innocent young people. And not in a good way. But, Jess is Jess, one of the good guys every good mystery needs, and she risks her home, his good name, maybe even his life to find and end the evil that grows around her.

This story reaches the limit in mystery guessing games, though Box always gives readers a fair chance to decide for themselves before it outplays us. And it poses interesting puzzles for us to ponder as we read, and perhaps for days after we’ve finished the story and the mystery is solved. A well plotted mystery Blue sky raises many ethical and moral issues along with legal requirements.

We find ourselves asking ourselves:

Why do men who have spent their lives in law enforcement tarnish the insignia they wore for years by straying so far from their oath to serve and protect?

Why do bankers in a remote mountain community in Idaho fall for today’s temptations and find themselves imitating their counterparts in the country’s financial centers?

Why do some men and women cling to the right path, even when it would be so much easier to simply step on the line that separates right from wrong?

Box makes us think about these things, but he never walks away from the characterizations he has built, and resist the temptation to preach to your readers as some authors do. Box describes the rugged mountainous region of northern Idaho and its equally rugged residents from the point of view of a man who knows the area and loves it. Jess’s love for her ranch and the community around it is easy to see and understand; she belongs to this place and time.

As the story progressed through betrayal, hate, and fear, through courage, honesty, and love, I found myself so invested in Jess that I almost stopped reading, fearing Box would end the wrong way for me. my.

But of course I read to the end. Was it the correct ending for Jess’s story, from my point of view? Every writer and every reader knows that there really is no right or wrong way to end a mystery, or any kind of fiction, for that matter. So he left that question unanswered.

Blue sky it’s a good read, lots of action, lots of plot twists and turns, just the right amount of good and bad characters. You will have to decide for yourself on the conclusion.

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