Reporter Kendal O’Dell is looking forward to a much-needed vacation with her rancher boyfriend, Tally. Her chances of getting away dwindle, however, when coworker, Lupe, begins acting strangely and suggests that she might have to quit. Reluctantly, Lupe confesses that her uncle and brother, who’ve entered the U.S. illegally, have gone missing. Kendal volunteers to help learn what happened to them provided that Lupe doesn’t leave. The decision causes a rift between her and Tally, but it soon becomes clear that this isn’t Kendal’s biggest worry.
Set in Arizona, Dark Moon Crossing is an entertaining story that focuses on the illegal immigrant situation. Author Sylvia Noble does a great job of ramping up the tension and action, and her detailed descriptions of the landscape makes the area an enticing place to visit.
As is common for amateur sleuths, Kendal took too many risks. Although some of them made sense, others didn’t, especially near the end when Kendal knew she could be killed if caught spying on the guilty parties. When the protagonist is questioning her own sanity, I have to wonder if there was a better approach to the ending without diminishing respect for the heroine.
This is a fairly minor point, but the question mark was apparently missing from the typesetter’s keyboard. The lack of question marks throughout the entire book resulted in what I first thought were run-on sentences, which had to be reread to figure things out. The error should have been caught before publication. Having said that, though I still enjoyed the story.