The Blessing Way (Joe Leaphorn Novels)
 

The Blessing Way (Joe Leaphorn Novels)

by Tony Hillerman

Homicide is always an abomination, but there is something exceptionally disturbing about the victim discovered in a high lonely place -- a corpse with a mouth full of sand, abandoned at a crime scene seemingly devoid of tracks or useful clues. Though it goes against his better judgment, Navajo Tribal Police Lieutenant Joe Leaphorn cannot help but suspect the hand of a supernatural killer.... (read more)

Top tags: mysterynative americanfictionnavajosouthwest (all tags)

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Liked It

Robert of Ravenclaw
  • Rated 4 stars

The Blessing Way (Joe Leaphorn Novels)
by Tony Hillerman

( 4 star )

I enjoyed this book , but I the ending was a bit of a let down . The story starts out on the Navajo Tribal Police with Lt. Joe Leaphorn is looking for a Navajo who has stabbed someone . As he goes to find he is joined by anthropologist Bergen McKee. The two find him dead . So Lt. Joe Leaphorn goes out to find who has killed him . McKee starts to look into the Navajo Witches . Both of there...

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Didn’t Like It

Justin M
  • Rated 2 stars

I think I like the Leaphorn novels better than the Chee novels by Hillerman.

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Community:
  • Rated 3.86 stars
Amazon:
  • Rated 4.4 stars
 

Newest Comments

  • grockle

    grockle said:

    Tony Hillerman is such a good storyteller that the subtle dose of social anthropology goes down very easily. I have enjoyed this whole series, and found it helpful to have the AAA map of the Four Corners area on hand while reading (it's one of their skinnier maps, that you have to ask for specifically). It's worth the effort, though, because Mr. Hillerman really puts you there. The Leaphorn/Chee books, of which this is the first, definitely come under the heading of fiction, but you come away with such a strong sense of place and an appreciation for the Navajo way of life that it's sometimes hard to know where reality ends and fiction begins. The metaphysical threads running through it add an element of intrigue, without becoming tediously deep and mysterious. The love of my life started in the middle with Sacred Clowns while living in Albuquerque, then read The Blessing Way and stopped there, having enjoyed them, but didn't get sucked into the series the way I did. I think perhaps it was the pacing that deterred him, but I find them addictive. Perhaps the key is to begin at the beginning.

    posted Saturday, January 5 2008
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