A review by mickeymole
Cold Skies by Thomas King

4.0

This third installment of the Thumps DreadfulWater series may be the best so far. It’s been awhile since I read the first two books, but King does such a nice job of reintroducing the characters, it was like I never left the small town of Chinook. And, what a cast of characters!

Trump DreadfulWater. Once a detective, he left the force after the woman he loved, and her young daughter were murdered, and he was unable to solve the crime. He’s now eking out a living as a landscape photographer, and trying to live a quiet existence in a town full of interesting, yet eccentric characters.

Archimedes Kousoulas. Archie, to his friends, owns a used-book shop, and knows everything and everybody. “Archie’s glasses were too large for his head and made him look like a Greek barn owl. He was the kind of friend everyone needed. Whether they wanted one or not.”

Duke Hockney. The no-nonsense sheriff who walks like John Wayne, and makes terrible coffee.

Cooley Small Elk. Thumps’ nephew. Big and strong. Think, Lou Ferrigno. “What Thumps appreciated most about the man was his innate intelligence and his gentle nature. Cooley seldom had a harsh word for anyone, and you had to work hard to get him angry. Thumps liked the man, but he always had the uneasy feeling that he was standing next to an impending avalanche.”

Claire Merchant. Chief of the Tribe and Thumps’ love interest. Definitely a strong woman with a mind of her own.

Stanley “Stick” Merchant. Claire’s son. “Stick was twenty-two or twenty-three and still lived at home because, to paraphrase the bank robber Willie Sutton, that was where the food was.”

Moses Blood. An elder Indian who lives in a trailer who philosophizes about any subject, no matter how mundane. He is also a great maker of chili. He reminds me of Chief Dan George in “The Outlaw Josey Wales” and “Little Big Man”. My favorite character, other than Thumps, but sadly, he has only a small part in this novel. “He was dressed in jeans, a blue work shirt, a white straw cowboy hat. Normally, he wore a pair of red runners, but today, for some reason, he was barefoot. The red runners had always struck Thumps as curious, but Moses told him that cowboy boots hurt his feet and that red was the color of dawn.”

Roxanne Heavy Runner. “A thick, handsome woman who had been the band secretary through at least six different chiefs. People who didn’t know her might think she was mean. In truth, she was just stern and somewhat inflexible. So far as Thumps could tell, there were few shades of gray in Roxanne’s world. If there were any at all.”

Deanna Heavy Runner. Roxanne’s younger sister. An intelligent, sweet woman working on a degree in criminology who endears herself to Thumps by helping him try to solve the case.

What makes this novel and the others in the series so much fun is the banter between Thumps and the rest of the characters. The mystery is a good one, and King takes us through the story with the reluctant Thumps collecting clues amidst little side stories that only add to the enjoyment.