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Run Cold

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"The Arctic trails have their secret tales

That would make your blood run cold."

—Robert W. Service, "The Cremation of Sam McGee"

Jack Mabie claims to be the meanest man in Alaska, yet the old sourdough seems to be just one of the crusty geezers in every roadhouse bewildered by how his lawless frontier life has morphed into the pastel 1950s world of martini cocktail bars up and down Fairbanks' Second Avenue.

Sonia Petrievich, an editor at The Gold, her father Hank's weekly pro-statehood paper, learns through the mukluk telegraph about Jack's gleeful account of murders and robberies and shell games during the gold rush days. Her breezy March 1957 profile lets Jack revel in newfound notoriety.

Edna Ferber, not completely satisfied with her forthcoming novel Ice Palace, has just returned for further research and is fascinated by Jack and his wild tales. Plus the previous summer, young Athabascan lawyer Noah West, a war hero and Sonia's lover, bent on bettering the lives of Alaskan Natives, had sharpened Edna's sense of a corner of the territory she'd ignored: "I felt I'd lost sight of the real Alaska, the heartless icebox in the North, the blank-eyed old-timers still haunted by gold... I'd forgotten Alaska is still frontier...a violent, mysterious world below the glossy skin I'd written about."

When Jack is found beaten to death, Noah becomes a suspect. Two violent deaths follow. Edna, Noah's advocate, decides she needs to clear his name, believing the murders are connected. As debates over potential statehood rage, Edna begins unearthing scandals and sordid stories hidden in Fairbanks but also dating back to village life in Fort Yukon and down into the Lower 48.

What horrible secrets carried from the Arctic Circle have led to so many murders? And what novelist could stand aside from this story?

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from October 29, 2018
      Set in 1957, Ifkovic’s excellent 10th and final Edna Ferber mystery (after 2018’s Mood Indigo) takes the Pulitzer Prize–winning writer to Alaska, the setting of her forthcoming novel, Ice Palace. In Fairbanks, Edna meets old, cantankerous Jack Mabie, who bills himself as “the meanest man in Alaska” and claims to have killed dozens of men decades earlier during the gold rush era. “Takes a lot of gumption and spit to get folks to hate your guts, ma’am,” he tells Edna, who replies: “Strangely, I get my enemies to hate me simply by being myself.” Jack’s subsequent beating death suggests someone bore him a serious grudge. When two people with ties to Jack die violently, Edna believes the crimes are linked to an incident in the past: “Nothing lies buried under Arctic snow for very long. The crevasses eventually spit up their secrets.” Distinctive characters, intelligent dialogue, and a credible solution to the crimes ensure that the series ends on a strong note. Fans will be sorry to see the last of Edna’s sleuthing adventures.

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  • English

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