As The
Drummers: A Josie Gray Mystery by Tricia Fields begins, it is January
in Artemis, Texas, and cold with overcast skies. The cold snap is not something
Police Chief Josie Gray or any of the other locals want as they prefer the
sunshine and warmth the rugged and of southwest Texas near the Big Bend region
normally provides. They want the cold and nasty weather gone. Many of the
locals also want the new group known as “The Drummers” to leave.
The group
recently brought the church in the heart of the small town, moved in, and made
it clear they were not going to socialize much if at all. In recent days, the
group has been acting stranger and stranger and the locals are getting
increasingly fed up and want them gone. The memory of what happened in Waco decades
ago still lingers in the minds of anyone in office and that is certainly true
for Chief Gray.
A small group of
a little more than twenty people, they are led by a man who now goes by the
name of “Gideon.” While he claims they only want to live off the grid and want
nothing to do with technology of the United States Government, the locals think
they are a dangerous commune at best or a cult at worst. Not only do they have small
children in the church when the windows have been painted black and all the
outside door knobs and handles have been removed, they have guns. A lot of guns
are being stockpiled inside the building and far more than the number of folks
living there. Clearly, the group is planning for something big, but what nobody
knows.
The last thing
Police Chief Josie Gray wants is another Waco style siege and assault in her
town. But what The Drummers want is unknown as signs indicate more and more
that they might be some sort of Doomsday type group bent on creating havoc. The
fact that they can identify one member who has a warrant for charges means they
have that legal way to enter. Unfortunately, gunfire erupts, a member of The Drummers
is killed, and what starts as a local issue quickly escalates with
ramifications across our entire country.
Complicated and
enjoyable as ever, this book marks a long awaited return of Police Chief Josie
Gray and the good folks of Artemis, Texas. Much like author Bill Crider, Terry
Shames, and Frank F. Havill did in their books, author Tricia Fields built an
entire series on a fictional place that is very real to the reader. In this
series, family and relationships as well as characters that evolve and change
from book to book are just as important as the mystery case is in the read. It
has been far too long since Midnight
Crossing was published and this reader is very thankful that seven
house brought readers back to the Southwest desert country of Texas via Police
Chief Josie Gray. As always, a love of the land and the people that reside
there comes through as does another very good mystery that packs in quiet a few
surprises along the way. Highly recommended as is the series.
The series and
my reviews to date:
The
Territory: A Mystery (March 2012)
Scratchgravel
Road: A Mystery (May 2013)
Wrecked
(April
2014)
Firebreak (August 2015)
Midnight
Crossing: A Mystery (October 2016)
The Drummers: A
Josie Gray Mystery
Tricia Fields
Severn House
March 2021
ISBN # 978-0-7278-9247-8
Hardback (also
available in audio and eBook formats)
240 Pages
My reading copy
came by way of the Dunbar Branch of the Dallas Library System.
Kevin R. Tipple
© 2021
4 comments:
I really enjoyed this book, Kevin. It was good to see Josie return. And, the setting is such an essential part of the book.
Indeed. I am very much hoping this book is the start of several more from her.
I also need my series fixes from Steven F. Havill and Terry Shames.
I'm not so optimistic about Terry Shames. I know she didn't re-sign with her publisher. We'll see what happens.
Well, heck, I did not know a thing about that. I am always in the dark.
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