Cork O'Connor series by William Kent Krueger (#1-13)
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Overview: William Kent Krueger
is the award-winning author of ten Cork O’Connor novels, including the
New York Times bestsellers Vermilion Drift and Northwest Angle. He lives
in St. Paul, Minnesota. Visit http://www.williamkentkrueger.com.
Genre: Mystery, Suspense, Thriller
Iron Lake (#1):
Part Irish, part Anishinaabe Indian, Corcoran "Cork" O'Connor is the
former sheriff of Aurora, Minnesota. Embittered by his "former" status,
and the marital meltdown that has separated him from his children, Cork
gets by on heavy doses of caffeine, nicotine, and guilt. Once a cop on
Chicago's South Side, there's not much that can shock him. But when the
town's judge is brutally murdered, and a young Eagle Scout is reported
missing, Cork takes on a mind-jolting case of conspiracy, corruption,
and scandal.
As a lakeside blizzard buries Aurora, Cork must dig
out the truth among town officials who seem dead-set on stopping his
investigation in its tracks. But even Cork freezes up when faced with
the harshest enemy of all: a small-town secret that hits painfully close
to home.
Boundary Waters (#2):
The Quetico-Superior Wilderness: more than two million acres of forest,
white-water rapids, and uncharted islands on the Canadian/American
border. Somewhere in the heart of this unforgiving territory, a young
woman named Shiloh -- a country-western singer at the height of her fame
-- has disappeared.
Her father arrives in Aurora, Minnesota, to
hire Cork O'Connor to find his daughter, and Cork joins a search party
that includes an ex-con, two FBI agents, and a ten-year-old boy. Others
are on her trail as well -- men hired not just to find her, but to kill
her.
As the expedition ventures deeper into the wilderness,
strangers descend on Aurora, threatening to spill blood on the town's
snowy streets. Meanwhile, out on the Boundary Waters, winter falls hard.
Cork's team of searchers loses contact with civilization, and like the
brutal winds of a Minnesota blizzard, death -- violent and sudden --
stalks them.
Purgatory Ridge (#3):
Not far from Aurora, Minnesota (population 3,752), lies an ancient
expanse of great white pines, sacred to the Anishinaabe tribe. When an
explosion kills the night watchman at wealthy industrialist Karl
Lindstrom's nearby lumber mill, it's obvious where suspicion will fall.
Former sheriff Cork O'Connor agrees to help investigate, but he has
mixed feelings about the case. For one thing, he is part Anishinaabe.
For another, his wife, a lawyer, represents the tribe.
Meanwhile,
near Lindstrom's lakeside home, a reclusive shipwreck survivor and his
sidekick are harboring their own resentment of the industrialist. And it
soon becomes clear to Cork that harmony, both at home and in Aurora,
will be on the back burner for some time....
Blood Hollow (#4):
When the corpse of a beautiful high school student is discovered on a
hillside four months after her disappearance on New Year's Eve, all
evidence points to her boyfriend, local bad boy Solemn Winter Moon.
Despite Solemn's self-incriminating decision to go into hiding, Cork
O'Connor, Aurora's former sheriff, isn't about to hang the crime on the
kid, whom O'Connor is convinced is innocent. In an uphill battle to
clear Solemn's name, Cork encounters no shortage of adversity. Some he
knows all too well -- small-town bigotry and bureaucracy foremost among
them. What Cork isn't prepared for is the emergence of a long-held
resentment hailing from his own childhood. And when Solemn reappears,
claiming to have seen a vision of Jesus Christ in Blood Hollow, the
mystery becomes thornier than Cork could ever have anticipated. And
that's when the miracles start happening....
Mercy Falls (#5):
Back on the beat as sheriff of Tamarack County, Cork O'Connor has
already seen his beautiful Northwoods jurisdiction through an eventful
summer. Now, as the chill of autumn sweeps through the countryside, he's
about to face a season of murder, adultery, and deceit that will take
him from seedy backwoods bars and humble reservation shanties to the
highest and most corrupt echelons of Chicago society.
Lured to
the nearby Ojibwe reservation on what appears to be a routine domestic
disturbance call, Cork finds himself the target of a sniper's deadly
fire. He has little time to worry about his own precarious situation,
however. Soon after the shooting, he's called to investigate a mutilated
body found perched above the raging waters of Mercy Falls. The victim
is Eddie Jacoby, a Chicago businessman involved in negotiating an
unpopular contract between his management firm and the local Indian
casino.
Now Cork must deal with a high-profile murder
contaminated with the blood of the rich and powerful. Sparks fly when
the wealthy Jacoby family insists on hiring a beautiful private
investigator named Dina Willner to consult on the case. But once Cork
discovers an old and passionate tie between one of the Jacoby sons and
his own wife, Jo, he begins to suspect that the events in Aurora have a
darker, more personal motive than he could ever have imagined.
With
his life at stake and the safety of his family in question, Cork must
squelch the growing suspicion that another man desperately wants his
wife, and at the same time resist the passion heating up between himself
and Dina.
Murder, greed, sex, and jealousy all play a part in
the maze of danger and intrigue Cork is caught in. But somewhere, hidden
beneath the turbulent depths of Mercy Falls, lie the answers, and Cork
is determined to find them.
Copper River (#6):
In well-crafted settings that are beautiful and unforgiving, with
unforgettable characters and jaw-dropping surprises, William Kent
Krueger's Cork O'Connor thrillers have drawn a flood of awards and
praise. The latest in the series finds the sheriff running for his life
from professional hit men who have already put a bullet through his leg.
Desperate, he finds sanctuary outside a small town called Bodine on the
Upper Peninsula of Michigan in an old resort owned by his cousin,
Jewell DuBois. Though Jewell, a bitter widow whose husband may have been
killed by cops, keeps Cork at arm's length, her fourteen-year-old son,
Ren, is looking for a friend. But being a father figure to Ren will
prove more difficult than Cork could possibly imagine.
When the
body of a young girl surfaces along the banks of the Copper River and
another teenager vanishes, Cork must choose between helping to solve
these deadly mysteries and thwarting the hit men who draw closer to him
with every hour. Recklessly, he turns from his own worries and focuses
on tracking the conspiracy of killers before Ren and his best friend,
Charlie, fall victim. It's an error -- one a good man might make -- but
as the contract killers who are hunting him close in, Cork realizes too
late that it may be the last mistake he'll ever make.
The trail
left by the dead girl eventually leads to a shelter for homeless youth
and into the grim reality of children lost and abandoned, who become
easy prey for the perverted appetites of human predators. All small
towns have buried secrets but, as Cork soon learns, this one has more
than its share.
Thunder Bay (#7): The promise, as I remember it, happened this way.
Happy
and content in his hometown of Aurora, Minnesota, Cork O'Connor has
left his badge behind and is ready for a life of relative peace, setting
up shop as a private investigator. But his newfound state of calm is
soon interrupted when Henry Meloux, the Ojibwe medicine man and Cork's
spiritual adviser, makes a request: Will Cork find the son that Henry
fathered long ago?
With little to go on, Cork uses his
investigative skills to locate Henry Wellington, a wealthy and reclusive
industrialist living in Thunder Bay, Ontario. When a murder attempt is
made on old Meloux's life, all clues point north across the border. But
why would Wellington want his father dead? This question takes Cork on a
journey through time as he unravels the story of Meloux's 1920s
adventure in the ore-rich wilderness of Canada, where his love for a
beautiful woman, far outside his culture, led him into a trap of
treachery, greed, and murder.
The past and present collide along
the rocky shores of Thunder Bay, where a father's unconditional love is
tested by a son's deeply felt resentment, and where jealousy and revenge
remain the code among men. As Cork hastens to uncover the truth and
save his friend, he soon discovers that his own life is in danger and is
reminded that the promises we keep - even for the best of friends - can
sometimes place us in the hands of our worst enemies.
Red Knife (#8):
When the daughter of a powerful businessman dies as a result of her
meth addiction, her father, strong-willed and brutal Buck Reinhardt,
vows revenge. His target is the Red Boyz, a gang of Ojibwe youths
accused of supplying the girl's fatal drug dose. When the head of the
Red Boyz and his wife are murdered in a way that suggests execution, the
Ojibwe gang mobilizes, and the citizens of Tamarack County brace
themselves for war, white against red.
Both sides look to Cork
O'Connor, a man of mixed heritage, to uncover the truth behind the
murders. A former sheriff, Cork has lived, fought, and nearly died to
keep the small-town streets and his family safe from harm. He knows that
violence is never a virtue, but he believes that it's sometimes a
necessary response to the evil that men do. Racing to find answers
before the bloodshed spreads, Cork himself becomes involved in the
darkest of deeds. As the unspeakable unfolds in the remote and beautiful
place he calls home, Cork is forced to confront the horrific truth:
Violence is a beast that cannot be contained.
In Red Knife,
Krueger gives his readers a vivid picture of racial conflict in
small-town America, as well as a sensitive look at the secrets we keep
from even those closest to us and the destructive nature of all that is
left unsaid between fathers and sons, husbands and wives, friends and
lovers.
Heaven's Keep (#9):
When a charter plane carrying Cork O’Connor’s wife, Jo, goes missing in
a snowstorm over the Wyoming Rockies, Cork must accept the terrible
truth that his wife is gone forever. But is she? In Heaven’s Keep,
celebrated author William Kent Krueger puts his intrepid hero through
the most harrowing mission of his life.
In the dark days
following Jo’s disappearance, Cork struggles to cope with his grief.
Then two women show up at his doorstep with evidence that the pilot of
Jo’s plane was not the man he claimed to be. It may not be definitive
proof, but it’s a ray of light in the darkness surrounding Cork’s loss.
Agreeing to investigate, he travels to Wyoming where he battles
interference from local law enforcement, hostility from members of the
Northern Arapaho community, and dogged assassins determined to throw
Cork off the trail—permanently. At the center of all the danger and
deception lies the possibility that Jo is not really dead and that,
somewhere along the labyrinthine path of his search, Cork will find her
alive and waiting for him.
With deft plotting and writing that satisfies as much as it thrills, Heaven’s Keep gives readers an adventure they won’t forget.
Vermilion Drift (#10): Some nights, Corcoran O’Connor dreams his father’s death.
William
Kent Krueger’s gripping tale of suspense begins with a recurring
nightmare, a gun, and a wound in the earth so deep and horrific that it
has a name: Vermilion Drift.
When the Department of Energy puts
an underground iron mine on its short list of potential sites for
storage of nuclear waste, a barrage of protest erupts in Tamarack
County, Minnesota, and Cork is hired as a security consultant.
Deep
in the mine during his first day on the job, Cork stumbles across a
secret room that contains the remains of six murder victims. Five appear
to be nearly half a century old—connected to what the media once dubbed
"The Vanishings," a series of unsolved disappearances in the summer of
1964, when Cork’s father was sheriff in Tamarack County. But the sixth
has been dead less than a week. What’s worse, two of the
bodies—including the most recent victim—were killed using Cork’s own
gun, one handed down to him from his father.
As Cork searches for
answers, he must dig into his own past and that of his father, a
well-respected man who harbored a ghastly truth. Time is running out,
however. New threats surface, and unless Cork can unravel the tangled
thread of clues quickly, more death is sure to come.
Northwest Angle (#11):
With his family caught in the crosshairs of a group of brutal killers,
detective Cork O’Connor must solve the murder of a young girl in William
Kent Krueger’s latest unforgettable New York Times bestseller.
During
a houseboat vacation on the remote Lake of the Woods, a violent gale
sweeps through unexpectedly, stranding Cork and his daughter, Jenny, on a
devastated island where the wind has ushered in a force far darker and
more deadly than any storm.
Amid the wreckage, Cork and Jenny
discover the body of a teenage girl. She wasn’t killed by the storm,
however; she’d been bound and tortured before she died. Nearby,
underneath a tangle of branches, they also find a baby boy, hungry and
dehydrated, but still very much alive. Powerful forces intent on
securing the child pursue them to the isolated Northwest Angle, where
it’s impossible to tell who among the residents is in league with the
devil, but Cork understands that to save his family he must solve the
puzzle of this mysterious child whom death follows like a shadow.
Trickster's Point (#12):
The latest in the New York Times bestselling Cork O’Connor mystery
series—the action never stops when the private detective ends up in the
crosshairs of a political assassin.
In Trickster’s Point, the
unsinkable Cork O’Connor is sitting in the shadow of a towering monolith
known as Trickster’s Point, deep in the Minnesota wilderness. Beside
him is the first Native American governor-elect, Jubal Little, who is
slowly dying with an arrow through his heart. Although the men have been
bow hunting, this is no accident. The arrow in the governor’s heart
belongs to Cork.
When he becomes the primary suspect in the
murder, Cork understands full well that he’s been set up. As he works to
clear his name and track the real killer, he recalls his long, complex
relationship with Jubal, the Native kid who aspired to be a populist
politician and grew to become a cunning man capable of treachery and
murder. As Cork looks deeply into his own past, he comes face to face
with the many motives, good and ill, that lead men and women into the
difficult, sometimes deadly, political arena.
Tamarack County (#13):
Tamarack County, Minnesota, the gateway to the pristine Boundary Waters
Canoe Area Wilderness. Within its borders lie a million acres of deep
forest, a thousand crystal clear lakes, and a few quiet towns. This is
the place that, for most of his life, sheriff-turned-private
investigator Cork O’Connor has called home.
As a blizzard swells
just days before Christmas, the car belonging to the wife of a retired
local judge is discovered abandoned on a rural road. After days without
any leads, the search-and-rescue team, assisted by O’Connor, has little
hope of finding her alive, if at all.
Early on, Cork notices
small details about the woman’s disappearance that tell a disturbing
story. And when the beloved pet dog of a friend is found decapitated, he
begins to detect a startling pattern of ominous incidents throughout
the area. Then Cork’s son is nearly killed, and he knows this is no
trick of his imagination. Someone is spinning a deadly web in Tamarack
County. At the center is a murder more than twenty years old for which
an innocent man may have been convicted. Cork remembers the case only
too well. He was the deputy in charge of the investigation that sent the
man to prison.
As the threat of violence continues, so does
life in the O’Connor household. Anne, Cork’s younger daughter, comes
home, having determined that she’s going to leave her religious order.
Teenaged Stephen is in love for the first time, and Cork is being
courted as well, even as he struggles to redefine life without his wife,
killed several years ago. What they all discover is that love, too, can
be a curse. It can cause the greatest euphoria and the most profound
despair. It can inspire forgiveness and understanding, passion and
desire. It can provoke jealousy and rage. It can bring on betrayal and
even murder.
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