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Ella Clah #8

Tracking Bear

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Is nuclear power the future for the Navajo?

NEED, a consortium of businessmen, plans to open a uranium mine and nuclear power plant on the Navajo Reservation, providing cheap power and jobs. For many Dineh , the NEED project looks like a wonderful opportunity. But many others remember all too clearly the perils of uranium mining and the destructive potential of nuclear power.

Councilmember Kevin Tolino hires a bodyguard after receiving threats because of his public support of NEED. A community college teacher is assaulted and his office and home are ransacked-- apparently by the same person who recently murdered a Navajo cop. When a tribal official who opposes NEED is murdered, clues seem to lead to a major supporter of the nuclear project.

Investigating the murders and the assault, Navajo Police Special Investigator Ella Clah is perplexed. Why would the wealthy businessmen behind NEED kill their political opponents instead of simply outspending them?

384 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published March 1, 2003

29 people are currently reading
191 people want to read

About the author

Aimée Thurlo

72 books151 followers
Aimee and David Thurlo are the authors of the Ella Clah mysteries, the Sister Agatha mysteries, the Lee Nez vampire novels all set in New Mexico. David grew up on the Navajo Indian Nation, and Aimee, a native of Cuba, lived in the southwest for forty years.

Aimée passed away peacefully at her home on the morning of February 28, 2014, after a brief struggle with cancer and related complications. She was attended by her husband of 43 years, David. Aimée was 62 years old.

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5 stars
138 (34%)
4 stars
160 (39%)
3 stars
92 (22%)
2 stars
8 (1%)
1 star
6 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 30 reviews
Profile Image for Annette.
221 reviews
January 4, 2021
Love reading a story set in the Navajo nation, with a strong female Navajo lead, and seeing New Mexican references and customs sprinkled throughout.
Profile Image for Mike.
806 reviews28 followers
August 14, 2017
This is another great installment in the Ella Clah series. The books shed an interesting view on Navaho beliefs and life in addition to being fun mysteries. It is the 8th book in the series. Read from the beginning the series shows both a growth in the characters and in the skills of the writer. This installment in general presented an interesting view on the Navaho outlook on nuclear power. Despite the devastation that the mining activities had on the tribe, it is still looked at as being a possible salvation of the tribe.
Profile Image for Carole.
787 reviews1 follower
July 20, 2018
This is the second book I’ve read featuring Special Investigator Ella Clah of the Navajo Nation Tribal police force in New Mexico. It was a police procedural focusing on solving three murders and also a book that dug into Dineh beliefs and culture and tribal fortunes, politics, and lifestyles. It engaged me from first page to the last, and it was well written with the main characters pretty well drawn. I enjoyed it and will read more of these books.
Profile Image for Douglas.
396 reviews2 followers
November 11, 2010
Another enjoyable Ella Clah novel. This one was much more just a good crime novel with little Navajo traditional religion in it. However it ends with the implication that the next installment most likely will once again deal with Ella's conflict with the Navajo witches (skin walkers)
Profile Image for Mariana.
Author 4 books19 followers
August 18, 2011
I really like this book. There were no skin walkers or supernatural stuff. I like the emphasis on science and compromise. Although the father of Ella's child doesn't seem to know the word compromise.
10 reviews
August 5, 2007
If you like Tony Hillerman's novels about the Southwest but hate the wait time between books, try some of Aimee & David Thurlo's books in a similar vein. Very enjoyable.
Profile Image for Sarah Haman.
778 reviews
February 27, 2012
As always I learned more about the Navaho reservation and the issues there. I also get to enjoy the mystery :) This time it revolves around the possibility of a nuclear power plant on the rez.
Profile Image for Nancy Wilson.
665 reviews4 followers
October 29, 2016
This was less grizzly than some of the previous books have been and I knew at least one of the bad guys fairly soon. But on the last page there is a bit of a twist--what is to come?
1,818 reviews84 followers
February 25, 2023
Although the Thurlo's are not the best writers their stories are generally exciting and interesting. In this one the tribe is divided as to whether or not they should adopt a nucleur power plant. Three murders, seemingly to do with the divide, are committed and Ella and her cousin, Justine, must investigate. Recommended to Ella Clah fans.
29 reviews
August 9, 2024
fun read indeed

Excellent plot, well done threaded and personal banderiation
Could give a litttle more room to the intellect of the reader in some of the simple bartering.
As a person who was an employee for a few years with Los Alamos county I enjoyed the return.
Profile Image for Diane.
523 reviews24 followers
August 21, 2021
I like that it's set in Navajo territory
6 reviews1 follower
August 20, 2023
really well written and well researched. I learned more about atomic energy, besides three mile island .i am assuming it was kept quiet because of military implications.
Profile Image for Diane.
295 reviews7 followers
July 25, 2014
In Tracking Bear, the spiritual Tracking Bear represents an evil from which there is no escape. It will hunt you down through your dreams, never giving up, never ending, so it's an appropriate image for the uranium mining that forms the center of this story's conflict. Ella Clah and her team are tasked to solve the murder of a fellow Tribal Police officer. Other murders around and without the Rez follow, all seemingly linked to whether a new nuclear power plant should be built on tribal land and the existing uranium mines re-opened, and who will control the new facility.

I was both educated and chilled by the background of a real nuclear plant and actively mined uranium on the Navaho reservation, its mismanagement and devastating aftermath. The book's end contains a twist that can only spell darker days ahead.

Profile Image for Scilla.
2,013 reviews
October 31, 2010
Ella Clah is in the tribal police on the Navajo reservation. A group of people called NEED are trying to get the tribe to build a nuclear power plant on the reservation to earn income for the tribe. There are many opponents to NEED, from environmentalists to those who remembered the deaths of uranium workers on the reservation. When another Navajo policeman is killed, Ella finds out that he has been opposing NEED, as has his father, a physicist who had worked at Los Alamos on classified stuff. Soon there are other murders which appear to be linked to NEED. Ella realizes that Kee Franklin, her officer's father has the links she needs to solve the case, and he has disappeared. Things come to a head as Ella finds Kee along with the two killers.
Profile Image for Steve.
832 reviews
June 15, 2014
This novel in a series of Aimee and David Thurlo was somewhat interesting, but not really the type of mystery I most enjoy. The setting is the Navajo Reservation and Ella Clah is a female detective with the Navajo police. I thought that the parallels to Tony Hillerman's book would make this a series I might enjoy. However, too much of the book content concerns the detective's issues raising her 3 year old daughter, interacting with her mother, the child's father, current love interest, and being involved in the love life of her female partner. Rich relationships make a book interesting, and give the story a good context, but for me Tracking Bear had to much focus on the relationships and not sufficient on the otherwise interesting and well crafted mystery.
421 reviews13 followers
September 30, 2007
My interest in the Southwest and Navajo culture kept me reading despite frequent irritation with the clumsy prose and obvious writing. No doubts about the "bad guys," who are painted bad from the beginning. But I like Ella Clah, the main character, and stayed with this novel. It's like a friend whose good nature outweighs an otherwise boring personality.
Profile Image for Jan.
463 reviews
June 16, 2009
Ella Clah is searching for the murderer of a fellow officer. It appears to be tied into the on-going discussion of building a nuclear plant on the reservation and the changes that it will bring. How does change occur while still walking in beauty?

Profile Image for Jo-Ann Murphy.
652 reviews26 followers
Read
August 2, 2011
The story moved along and held my interest. But it was not much of a mystery. They why was more of a mystery but it did not really matter. But the culprits were rather obvious from the get go. A nice light read.
Profile Image for Fredrick Danysh.
6,844 reviews196 followers
March 13, 2012
A Navajo police officer is killed and Investigator Ella Clah tries to solve the case. The reservation is split over the issue of building a nuclear power plant and as more murders occur, Clah believes that everything is linked. The authors are sutlely projecting several liberal political messages.
Profile Image for Ollie.
666 reviews5 followers
February 1, 2011
Very similar to Tony Hillerman's except at the beginning the pace of the story drags a little.
Profile Image for Bj Hoover.
182 reviews1 follower
May 5, 2012
This one is a really gripping tale in the series, and I enjoyed it all over again!
Profile Image for Chris.
21 reviews
July 5, 2014
Longer than it needed to be. Authors included too many unnecessary details.
1,267 reviews3 followers
July 28, 2014
I cannot wait to read the next one.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 30 reviews

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