Burgess wrote a handful of novels for Leisure Books in the 80s, but this is the first one of his I have read. The back blurb is useless and misleading except it mentions the legend of the Windigo. Our lead, Travis Randell, although Cree, was raised in a city (Winnipeg?). Poor, he saw many friends succumb to drugs and alcohol, and witnessed his brother being shot to death. After dropping out of high school, he doggedly decided he wanted out of the life and earned his graduation certificate before attending community college for a degree in journalism. His wife Nicole urged him on all the way and when the novel starts, they are driving their old beater car to Batesville in Northern Canada where Travis scored his first job.
Travis knows he needs experience to make it big in journalism and hence accepted the job in little Batesville. Not much happens in the sleepy town, and just north of it can be found a small Indian reservation. The prologue, set 100 years ago, features a young Indian bride to be going off into the wilds for her 'trial', only to found later eating her suitor's dead body. Ugh! Burgess serves up Windigo as an evil, gluttonous spirit who can possess people when it is not eating them. The theme of cannibalism pervades the book!
Burgess introduces an array of characters and we know almost right off the bat that the Mayor and some other 'notables' in town are up to something hinky, but you must wait until almost the end to find out their secret. Meanwhile, Travis gets the lay of the land and bodies keep turning up eaten. All of this is hushed up by the Mayor and the paper where Travis works, but he knows there is something going on. Only his determination to keep his first job can keep his fierce sense of investigative journalism at bay. Further, what is up with the Rez folks? Travis has standing orders to stay away from them and all news from their is carefully filtered by the paper's manager.
I really liked Burgess' style and prose and he brought the cold Northern Canada to life really well. This ended a bit abruptly, but kudos on the excellent pacing for the rest of it. Not really spooky, but there is some killer foo when the Windigo comes around. Some neat twists and turns to boot. Not a literary masterpiece, but a great slice of 80s horror. 3.5 stars, rounding up!!