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Hemlock County #1

The Dead of Winter

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Combing the woods of rural Pennsylvania in the hopes of finding the man who shot and killed his son in what the police called a hunting accident, Paul Michelson risks his life for the sake of justice. Reissue.

336 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 1988

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About the author

David Poyer

82 books240 followers
Aka D.C. Poyer.

DAVID C. POYER was born in DuBois, PA in 1949. He grew up in Brockway, Emlenton, and Bradford, in western Pennsylvania, and graduated from Bradford Area High School in 1967. He graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis in 1971, and later received a master's degree from George Washington University.

Poyer's active and reserve naval service included sea duty in the Atlantic, Mediterranean, Arctic, Caribbean, and Pacific, and shore duty at the Pentagon, Surface Warfare Development Group, Joint Forces Command, and in Saudi Arabia and Bahrain. He retired in July 2001.

Poyer began writing in 1976, and is the author of nearly fifty books, including THE MED, THE GULF, THE CIRCLE, THE PASSAGE, TOMAHAWK, CHINA SEA, BLACK STORM, THE COMMAND, THE THREAT, KOREA STRAIT, THE WEAPON, THE CRISIS, THE CRUISER, TIPPING POINT, HUNTER KILLER, DEEP WAR, OVERTHROW, VIOLENT PEACE, ARCTIC SEA, and THE ACADEMY, best-selling Navy novels; THE DEAD OF WINTER, WINTER IN THE HEART, AS THE WOLF LOVES WINTER, THUNDER ON THE MOUNTAIN, and THE HILL, set in Western Pennsylvania; and HATTERAS BLUE, BAHAMAS BLUE, LOUISIANA BLUE, and DOWN TO A SUNLESS SEA, underwater diving adventure.

Other noteworthy books are THE ONLY THING TO FEAR, a historical thriller, THE RETURN OF PHILO T. McGIFFIN, a comic novel of Annapolis, and the three volumes of The Civil War at Sea, FIRE ON THE WATERS, A COUNTRY OF OUR OWN, and THAT ANVIL OF OUR SOULS. He's also written two sailing thrillers, GHOSTING and THE WHITENESS OF THE WHALE. His work has been published in Britain, translated into Japanese, Dutch, Italian, Hugarian, and Serbo-Croatian; recorded for audiobooks, iPod downloads, and Kindle, and selected by the Literary Guild and Doubleday Book Club and other book clubs. Rights to several properties have been sold or optioned for films, and two novellas appeared in the Night Bazaar series of fantasy anthologies.

Poyer has taught or lectured at Annapolis, Flagler College, University of Pittsburgh, Old Dominion University, the Armed Forces Staff College, the University of North Florida, Christopher Newport University, and other institutions. He has been a guest on PBS's "Writer to Writer" series and on Voice of America, and has appeared at the Southern Festival of Books and many other literary events. He taught in the MA/MFA in Creative Writing program at Wilkes University for sixteen years. He is currently core faculty at the Ossabaw Writers Retreat, a fellow of the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, and a board member of the Northern Appalachia Review.

He lives on Virginia's Eastern Shore with novelist Lenore Hart.


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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
39 reviews
April 17, 2021
The start of a marvelous series. Rich and full of detail, a precise picture of rural Pennsylvania's mountains and people.
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Author 3 books36 followers
June 7, 2013
I was pleasantly surprised by this book. I knew nothing about Poyer or his work. I had some old books belonging to my grandmother. Well, it wasn't that old, but she had the third book in the "Hemlock County" series, and being an OCD purist, I decided to check out the first. I'll try not to give anything away, but the first act of the book delivers a very surprising twist and gives you two villains operating at different ends of a spectrum of evil. The simpler end of that spectrum, the one more identifiable as a villain, is unknown for much of the book but operates according to more easily defined principles of evil. The other is revealed in the early going, but his motives are much more complex, his motivation arising from a morass of politics, personal conviction, and...well, I don't want to give it away. In the midst of this is Racks Halverson, the sage old hunter who is good mostly because he's survived to old age and learned the important life lessons. I was a bit disappointed by the resolution, as the two villains are engaged with each other late in the game and things are tied up between them rather too cleanly. It's as if Poyer knew the complexities of his characters' motivations and didn't feel confident in himself to flesh that complexity out in a more ambiguous climax. I'm being purposely vague so I don't spoil it. Overall, The Dead of Winter is a smarter thriller than I thought it would be, and I look forward to reading more of the Hemlock County series.
18 reviews
April 9, 2014
Dated, but exciting for those who love deer hunting, survival, the outdoors, crime, and adventure. Poyer writes very well, but some of the violence could have been replaced with more intrigue in my opinion.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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