New York Times bestseller Julia Spencer-Fleming returns to her beloved Clare Fergusson/Russ Van Alstyne mystery series
It’s Christmas time in Millers Kill, and Reverend Clare Fergusson and her husband Russ van Alstyne - newly resigned from his position as chief of police – plan to enjoy it with their baby boy. On their visiting Santa, decorating the tree, and attending the church Christmas pageant. But when a beloved holiday parade is crashed by white supremacists, Clare and Russ find themselves sucked into a parallel world of militias, machinations and murder.
Meanwhile, single mom and officer Hadley Knox has her hands full juggling her kids and her police work. She doesn’t want to worry about her former partner – and sometimes lover – Kevin Flynn, but when he takes leave from the Syracuse PD and disappears, she can’t help her growing panic that something has gone very wrong. Novice lawyer Joy Zhào is keeping secrets from her superiors at the state Attorney General’s Office. She knows they wouldn’t condone her off-the-books investigation, but she’s convinced a threatening alt-right conspiracy is brewing – and catching the perpetrators could jump start her career.
NYS Forest Ranger Paul Terrance is looking for his uncle, a veteran of the park service gone inexplicably missing. He doesn’t think much of an ex-cop and out-of-town officer showing up in his patch of the woods, but he’s heard the disturbing rumors of dangerous men in the mountains.
In New York Times Julia Spencer-Fleming's latest novel, as Christmas approaches, these five people will discover their suspicions hang on a single twisting thread, leading to the forbidding High Peaks of the Adirondacks. As the December days shorten and the nights grow long, a disparate group of would-be heroes need to unwind a murderous plot before time runs out.
Work-In-Progress Wednesday at my Reader Space. We're up to the fifth part of the second chapter of my eighth book, which has some numerological meaning, I'm sure. http://bit.ly/p2QwJa
If you’re looking for a suspenseful crime thriller set in rural up-state New York, then At Midnight Comes the Cry by Julia Spencer-Fleming is a book to consider reading. It features Reverend Clare Fergusson and her husband Russ Van Alstyne. It’s Christmas time and the couple plan to enjoy their eight-month-old son Ethan’s first Christmas. However, when a holiday parade is crashed by those who are racist and believe immigrants are taking jobs from others, Clare and Russ are pulled into a world of militias, murder, and plots.
Meanwhile, single mom and police officer Hadley Knox is juggling her two children, her grandfather, and her job. She’s also worried about her former partner, who has taken a leave of absence from his Syracuse police department job and has disappeared for two months. Additionally, new lawyer Joy Zhao is keeping secrets from her superiors at the state Attorney General’s office with an off-the-books investigation and New York State Forest Ranger Terrance is looking for his uncle, a veteran of the park service, who has gone missing. How these events collide makes for a suspenseful thriller.
Clare is a former military helicopter pilot and combat medic. She is now in the National Guard and an Episcopalian priest and married to Russ, former military and recently retired police chief in their small town. While this is the first book I have read in the series, it worked for me. However, there are references to events in prior books. For the full character development and background, I believe the series is best read in order.
This well-written novel has multiple layers to it and a few twists. However, the pacing was a little slow in the middle. The characterization is good and there’s a good mix of the individuals’ personal lives and the investigations. Real-world issues were incorporated into the story that added an extra layer of apprehension. The epilogue wrapped up most threads well, but there was one lingering one that I wanted resolution on that I didn’t get. Perhaps it will be in the next book. Themes include racism, murder, domestic violence, childcare, family, and community.
Overall, this is a gripping story with strong main characters, excellent world-building, and emotional moments. I’m looking forward to reading more books in this series.
St. Martin’s Press – Minotaur Books and Julia Spencer-Fleming provided a complimentary digital ARC of this novel via NetGalley. All thoughts and opinions expressed in this review are my own. The publication date is currently set for November 18, 2025. --------------------------------------- My 4.05 rounded to 4 stars review is coming soon.
It’s so hard to know that this is the series finale of a book I’ve been reading for years. While Fleming has been writing it since the early 2000s, I discovered it twenty years later when the world fell apart, and I needed to escape to something far from daily life. This series and these characters that now feel like family were just what I needed, and as a result, I feel such a strong connection to Clare, Russ, Hadley, Kevin, and the rest of the gang.
Although I did not want to say goodbye, I cannot envision a better final chapter to the story, nor a better (and more timely) police case for the team to get to the bottom of. Jarring to see current headlines pop up within the story, Spencer Fleming, as she always does, tackles the hot-button issues with the nuanced delicacy required to showcase the importance and urgency of them to the fabric of our society.
And alas, without spoiling the ultimate outcomes, I think long time readers will feel satisfied with where these beloved characters are in their lives as we close the final chapter.
🎧 I chose to do an immersive read, using both audio and print. After originally reading the series with my eyes, I took an alternate route: rereading with my ears. And though both are fantastic, I prefer print/ebook over audio. Narrator Suzanne Toren is terrific, but because I had already established these characters in my mind’s eye, her voice (of Clare) wasn’t quite what I had envisioned. That said, her narration quickly grew on me, and if you have not read the series yet, I think you cannot go wrong regardless of format.
Read if you like: ▪️comfort series ▪️engaging and relatable characters ▪️cozy thrillers, ▪️social commentary ▪️romance subplot ▪️small town life
Thank you Minotaur Books and Macmillan Audio for the gifted copies.
A huge thank you to Minotaur Books for the advanced copies of my most anticipated book of 2025.
I am notorious for picking up a book without reading much about it and was surprised that not only is this the 10th book in a series (that didn’t matter), but also that the author tackles some pretty “hot button” issues currently facing society, including those of political extremists and religion. Set during the Christmas season in upstate New York, this story is both thrilling and chilling, full of twists, wonderful characters, and intricate mysteries.
There are multiple characters and I did find it tricky at times to keep track of who is who, but it is a buckle-up-for-the-ride kind of story. Full of action/danger, murder, nefarious villains (fascist militia), family, romance, helping others, and more, my attention was held and I almost wanted to cover my eyes at times.
Clare, the FMC, is a reverend, so religion is mentioned frequently, and there is also some language (including strong) and some violence (not graphic).
Content: some violence; moments of danger/peril; language; romance
*I received a complimentary copy. All thoughts and opinions expressed are my own and were voluntarily given.*
Special thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for a free, electronic ARC of this novel received in exchange for an honest review.
Expected publication date: November 18, 2025
“At Midnight Comes the Cry” is the tenth novel in the Reverend Clare Fergusson and Russ Van Alstyne mystery series of novels by Julia Spencer-Fleming. In this installment, Christmas comes to Millers Kill and Clare and her husband, former police chief Russ, look forward to the first holiday season with their infant son. When a group of white supremacists crash the Christmas parade, both Clare and Russ are drawn back into action into a world of hate, conspiracy and murder. Police officer Hadley Knox adds to the couple’s workload when she reveals that her partner, and sometimes lover, police officer Kevin Flynn, has gone missing during an undercover operation and may very well be behind enemy lines in the white supremacist camp. The three, along with young lawyer Joy Zhao and forest ranger Paul Terrance, join forces to infiltrate the camp and take them down, all while locating Kevin and keeping the community safe.
“Cry” is an intense read, especially for a storyline that takes place over the Christmas holidays. There is a lot of hate, subtle political themes, and religious undertones (which makes sense as Clare is a reverend), so, if you have a strong opinion on any of these, I recommend leaving this novel behind, as it will no doubt raise some tempers, and cause some fiery conversations. If you do jump into this novel, it won’t disappoint on the mystery front and it is most definitely full of high-octane drama and action.
There are a lot of narrators in this one, as Clare, Russ, Joy and Paul take over the plot at different points throughout the novel. There are also a lot of background characters who don’t take centre stage, but they are important enough to know, so readers should keep track of them. I found this difficult at first, especially with characters who have similar positions in the police force, but I was able to differentiate between them enough to make sense of the plot.
Spencer-Fleming is a new author for me and “Cry” was the first novel I’ve read in the Fergusson/Van Alstyne series of novels. I would’ve really liked to read the other nine novels in the series, as I definitely felt left behind and that I was missing some key character development points, which no doubt I was seeing as “Cry” is the tenth novel. There were no chapters per se, as the story had sections, but the novel was delineated by asterisks, so readers did have the oppourtunity for breaks.
“Cry” is tense, emotional, suspenseful and action-packed, but I found it challenging to tell similar characters apart. Readers of the previous novels in this series will no doubt find “Cry” far more engaging than I did.
This is the 10th book in Julia Spencer-Fleming's "Rev. Clare Fergusson & Russ Van Alstyne Mysteries" series and I have loved them all. Set during the Christmas season mayhem begins at the Christmas Parade where there is a white supremacist float and the members are handing out leaflets among the crowd. Horrific events begin to unfold and a murderous plot needs to be unwound before time runs out. I loved revisiting all of the characters I am familiar with as well as getting to know new ones added to the story. Excellent writing, riveting suspense - an excellent story! Thank you Julia Spencer-Fleming for such a wonderful series!
Thank you to NetGalley and St. Martin's Press/Minotaur Books for an arc of this novel in exchange for my honest review.
Thanks to NetGalley and St Martin's Press (Minotaur Books) for this much appreciated ARC. The cover is beautiful and eye-catching., and implies the story will be a cosy, Christmas-time mystery. It addresses current issues of political extremists, with added problems of hate, conspiracy, immigration, missing people,domestic violence, religion, and murder. This is book number 10 in the series, and the first I have read. I felt I missed important character development and background, which would have been more engaging if I had read the previous books.
Clare Fergusson had a diverse character arc. She is presently an Episcopalian priest and member of the National Guard. She had been a helicopter pilot in a combat zone. I found her to be more credible as a daring pilot, and had to keep reminding myself that she was now a religious minister. I wanted to know more about her personal development and her relationship with retired police chief, Russ Van Alstyne who is now her husband. I would have felt more connected with the characters if I had read earlier books in the series.The storyline has plenty of drama, action, and suspense, and multiple characters whom the reader must attend closely to the complex plot. The story felt overlong but compelling, well-written, emotional, and with tension throughout.
Clare and Russ have a small son, Ethan, and are looking forward to the various activities in their small town of Millers Kill in upstate NY. The annual Christmas parade was spoiled by a float conaining racists attempting to distribute their messages of hate to the crowds.
There is fear that these white supremicists are engaged in an extreme right wing conspiracy against minorities and immigrants. Adding to the threat, police officer Hadley Knox, is worried about her former partner, Kevin Flynn. He has vanished after two months with the Syracuse police department. Has he been working undercover among the racist group?
Forrerst Ranger, Paul, reports that a veteran of the park service is missing. Joy Zhao is assigned to the state attorney office. She involves herself with the possible extreme right-wing fascist threat, which is against her duties.
This was a satisfying thriller that would be more engaging for those who read some previous books in the series.
thank you NetGalley for the advanced readers copy!
WOW this was such a perfect cozy, small town mystery/thriller. when I requested this book, it was purely off the vibes and the storyline. I was worried when I looked it up on GR and saw that it was the tenth book in a series. let me tell you: you do NOT have to read the rest of the series to understand this one. Julia does a fabulous job of explaining who people are/the setting in a way that I don't think would at all annoy readers who have read the whole series (which makes sense since the last book came out five years ago!!).
I was hooked literally 10% in and fell in love with Millers Kill. despite being fine reading this book without the rest of the series, I will be reading the rest of the books this next year because it truly was that good
*4.5 stars rounded up. This mystery-suspense thriller has everything: murder, action, mayhem, evil bad guys (fascist militia men), love, romance, family, religion, all set in the joyful holiday season. I've always enjoyed this series and these remarkable characters and now this latest one ranks as my favorite.
Many thanks to the author and publisher for providing me with an arc of this new novel via NetGalley. My review is voluntary and the opinions expressed are my own.
I didn't think we would get any more books in this series about Fergusson and Van Alstyne by Julia Spencer-Fleming. I was so glad to see that there is a new book about this unconventional duo. It is another small town setting but with some really big issues and it is wonderfully written as always. I can always tell when it's a good author because of the speed I go through the book. If the language is not very good it takes me longer to read and I take more pauses. If it wasn't for need of food and sleep I would have read this one in one sitting. I love the characters and setting. I must thank Minotaur Books and Edelweiss for giving me an advance copy. The rest of you will have to wait until November 18th.
At Midnight Comes the Cry by Julia Spencer-Fleming is her 10th in the series where she has an engaging husband-wife detective-ish team - Clare Fergusson who is an Episcopal priest, and Russ Van Alstyne who had previously been the chief of police in Millers Kill (a fictional town in the Adirondack Mountains). This was also my first read of this author and this series. So I'm out of order.
However, I was able to stay up with the from-here-to-there happenings of this narrative. There are many characters who lean in and chat a bit, referring to things everyone in the room seems to know, but it wasn't any more displacing than when one meets new folks for the first time. It wasn't off-putting.
As the cover and title indicate, this is a tale told around winter holidays, and mixes a variety of religions, Christmas and Hanukkah. This is definitely told from a Christian perspective, with prayers and scriptures popping up at the proper times. (If one insists on murderous fiction, guidance will be offered for free, along with hot beverages and bakery goods.)
I'm in, and have already put #1 on hold. Who doesn't need a new series to read?
*A sincere thank you to Julia Spencer-Fleming, Macmillan Audio, and NetGalley for an ARC to read and review independently.* #AtMidnightComestheCry #NetGalley 26|52:39a
It's more a 3,5 stars because the last part was tiring. While I recognize that the author was meticulous in details and admire her work, it was tiring.
I adore Clare, how she's such a good person, determined to help whatever the circumstances are. She's determined, resourceful, not easily scared and so much funny. It was a pleasure to see her again, and Russ, in this new book.
Unfortunately, the theme of this book is very real and present in our days: white supremacists groups, racism, prejudice, hate...
I received a free copy of, At Midnight Comes the Cry, by Julia Spencer-Fleming, from the publisher and Netgalley in exchange for an honest review. This book is set in Millers Kill during the Christmas season, and a lot is going on, not all good. This is not a warm and fuzzy Christmas read at all. This was a good read.
My first experience with an exceptionally well written thriller featuring an unconventional team that evidently has been around for a while. Clare, a former police officer and helicopter pilot stationed in Iraq now an Episcopal priest and her partner Russ, retired police chief, along with their baby Ethan. Apparently they've moved to upper state New York and find themselves up against a nest of white supremacists. Very impressive descriptions of action set pieces as well as character development across the board.
At Midnight Comes The Cry Author: Julia Fleming-Spencer Source: Netgalley Publication Date: Nov. 18, 2025
As a practicing Anglican parishioner, I enjoy following this series featuring our lead protagonist Clare, the priest, and her retired police husband Russ. This is a series of books, and they’re all good, with just the right blend of solving crimes, helping people, helping church members, and trying to bring their community together. I like that it is a more mature couple, and they have a new baby, and both have a military background, which makes for some interesting situations. This book was excellent and dealt with a malicious style group that sought to sow chaos in their community. Always enjoyable, and I love this one set during the Advent season.
I received a complimentary copy of this book. The opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own. Thank you to the publisher, Netgalley, and the author for the opportunity to read this novel.
Millers Kill Reverend Clare Ferguson and husband Russ Van Alstyne, recently retired as police chief, and both military veterans, attend a Christmas parade when a white supremacist participant and others’ response to him escalates into a fight that Russ breaks up. Clare reaches out to the man’s wife, and the couple soon find themselves in danger as they investigate a local militia.
This is the tenth in a series; I have read only one prior installment. This would work as a stand alone.
The writing is well-crafted, and the story engaging. Spencer-Fleming effectively captures the essence of small-town upstate New York. In referring to the supporting characters, the author frequently alternates between using their first and last names; initially, I had to pay close attention to distinguish who was who. When the manhunt moves outdoors and the militia is being tracked, there is a lot of run on detail and I found myself skimming a bit.
Despite these minor issues, the topic of the story is important and timely. It’s also a bit frightening because it reflects reality.
Thanks to @NetGalley and @StMartinsPress @Minotaur_Books for the DRC.
I believe this is the first I’ve read by this author, and wow, it was intense!!
There are multiple MAIN characters, and they each have their own flaws as well as wonderful attributes… but, it seems like they should NOT be working together on this particular project. And yet, here they are, and it seems like the entire world is IN THEIR HANDS!!
We have a very recently retired Chief Of Police, as well as his wife, a Priest, and their baby boy.
Then we have a young female police officer who is in search of her old partner who seems to have gone off the grid.. and no one, not even his parents, have heard from him for months!
Then we have an Indian Park Ranger who is in search of his missing Uncle. He’s also a Park Ranger with many years on the job… and when he’s been missing for about a day, the nephew starts to worry…
Add to this that there seems to be a huge uprising of White Supremacists in this small, really upstate NY town that’s out in the boondocks… and, well, we seem to have a recipe for disaster…
There’s also a young, female, Asian Lawyer in the mix, who’s friends with the Priest…
This is a fast-paced, nail-biting story that will keep you glued your seat, and the pages!!
4 1/2 stars for me, happily rounded up to 5!! 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
#AtMidnightComesTheCry by @JuliaSpencerFleming and narrated beautifully by (an Angela Lansbury double, imo….) @SuzanneToren.
*** This one has NOT BEEN RELEASED YET, please look 👀 for it in a few days on 11/18/25!! ***
Thanks so much to @NetGalley and @MacmillanAudio for an ALC of the audiobook in exchange for an honest review.
You can find my reviews on: Goodreads, Instagram: @BookReviews_with_emsr and/or My Facebook Book Club: Book Reviews With Elaine
Thanks so much for reading! And if you ‘liked’ my review, please share with your friends, & click ‘LIKE’ below… And, let me know YOUR thoughts if you read it!! 📚⭐️
Stayed up late to finish this one. Not only does she tackle some quite current themes, Fleming continues to write great characters, and relationships, making this book a quite satisfying read. And now I want to start the whole series all over again.
I started this series with the tenth book. I think each one focuses on a different story, in which Reverend Clare and her husband Russ undertake a dangerous mission.
While Clare focuses on Tina, a young mother with an abusive husband, her husband, Russ, and police officer Hadley Knox investigate the disappearance of a fellow officer. Both cases point to a militia group forming in the area. This isn't how Clare and Russ planned to spend their first Christmas with their son.
I really liked Clare. I hadn't read the previous books in this series, but she surprised me at every turn. She's not only a loving mother and supportive wife, but also a caring person who did everything in her power to rescue a young mother and her daughter from an abusive relationship. She's a pastor who cares for her parishioners, a brave former pilot who served in Afghanistan, and a woman with a sense of humor.
An interesting small town mystery with a priest and a cop in the lead roles.
I recommend reading this series in order so you don't miss out on the personal lives of Clare Fergusson and Russ Van Alstyne.
Many thanks to NetGalley and St. Martin’s Press for an ARC of this novel.
It’s hard to believe that this is already the tenth in the author’s beloved Rev. Clare Fergusson and Russ Van Alstyne mystery series. I can’t say that I’ve read each installment, and, although the author does provide a bit of backstory for the leading characters and their actions in the current adventure, I would not recommend this book as a starting point. This is especially the case if you want to understand Clare, Russ, and how they got together.
The Fergusson-Van Alstynes, as book 10 begins, have just celebrated their first anniversary, and have a beautiful eight month old baby, Ethan. They live in upper New York State, in the rural town of Millers Kills. Despite the name, it is considered a snug and cozy, perfectly safe little place to settle and raise a family. Clare and Russ and baby are a snug and cozy little family. Or so most would assume, given that she’s an Episcopal priest and he’s the now-retired former Chief of Police. They share a background in the armed forces, and were both deployed to Iraq, where Clare was a helicopter pilot.
Now that they have a baby, they want nothing so much as to live a ‘normal’ quiet life. The Christmas season is about to begin, and they are looking forward to the kick-off Lighted Tractor Parade. The fun is immediately tempered by the participation of white supremacists promoting their cause with their own tractor, banners and leaflets. They are immediately drawn in to break up a fight. Clare, performing her duty as local pastor, tries to mediate. She arranges to meet socially with two of the supremacist women, figuring that, as a wife and mother, as well as a pastor, she could lead them to see their error.
While Clare is occupied ostensibly doing her job, Russ is trying to adjust to his recent, not exactly voluntary, retirement. Although he swears he’s left policing behind him, he jumps enthusiastically into a case involving two former MKPF colleagues. Hadley Knox, anxious about the seeming disappearance of Kevin Flynn, an undercover cop and sometime lover, seeks Russ’s help to find him. approaches him for help in finding their colleague and her sometimes lover, Flynn. Looking for information, they locate Flynn’s assistant, the young lawyer/federal agent Joy (Yixin) Zhao. She tells them what they were tasked to do: find the big players among the disparate groups planning to rid the US of the immigrants (especially Jews) they resent. And how, when the mission was suddenly aborted, she and Flynn continued it on their own.
Clare’s ‘work’ with the women and Hadley and Russ’s mission to find Flynn converge over the murder of an Indigenous State Park Ranger in the Adirondack Mountains. His nephew, Paul Terrance, also a ranger, joins forces with them to find him. They do, but too late. Meanwhile, they haven’t found Flynn or any militia leaders, but Clare is getting closer.
The story becomes increasingly dark and intense as the storylines converge and it becomes evident that these people are not merely making a point about their right to presumed right to power just for being white and American-born. Did Flynn meet his fate at the hands of the groups he was attempting to infiltrate? Who killed the elderly Ranger who had patrolled the Adirondacks since childhood without encountering violence? Are these social outliers disturbed enough to plan a serious terrorist attack? Is Clare’s embedding herself within the wives’ circle endangering them all?
Julia Spencer-Fleming is a skilled writer who can juggle half a dozen leading characters and a complicated plot with style. I did find myself occasionally confused when names and last names were inconsistently used, and, being Canadian, I didn’t recognize some of the agency and police acronyms. One that everyone will recognize is ICE, whose policies are increasingly terroristic themselves. That’s where this book really hits home: it’s no cozy Christmas story but a white knuckle, all too real ride.
Not a warm and fuzzy Christmas read! When a series features as main characters a police chief and a female Episcopal priest who has served as an Army Blackhawk pilot in a combat zone, readers know this is not going to be your typical “thriller” novel. It is better described as a mainstream series whose plots center on police situations and procedures. I have read and enjoyed a number of the books. The setting in the small town of Millers Kill in upstate New York is nicely drawn as always. The best part of the series, though, is the characters. Now husband and wife, Claire and Russ have interesting personal connections by virtue of the small-town atmosphere and their careers in law enforcement and clerical service. Both their personalities and those of the people around them and their relationships are nicely portrayed and make this a very credible cast. Russ and Claire’s own “cast of characters” has recently been expanded even further as a result of the arrival of their son Ethan, and the joys and frustrations of parenthood are fun to read. It took a while for the plot to develop, and for me the story line was the weakest part of the book. The book description alerts readers that a group of right-wing white supremacists are putting a damper on the town’s upcoming Christmas holiday celebrations, so I was expecting perhaps something a little worse than a disgruntled relative knocking off Aunt Jane for the inheritance, but the violence and nastiness went beyond what I expected and included things like physical and sexual spousal abuse. It seriously affected my personal enjoyment of the book to the extent that I considered not finishing it, but readers less sensitive than I are likely to find it well done. Since I enjoyed a number of earlier books in the series quite a bit, I will be on the lookout for future instalments, but I hope appropriate warnings will be provided for the squeamish like me. I received an advance review copy of this book from NetGalley and Minotaur Books.
This is the 10th (and maybe final?) book in the excellent mystery series featuring Rev Clare Fergusson - an Episcopalian priest and former Blackhawk pilot and her husband, former police chief Russ Van Alstyne. It's the beginning of Advent, white supremacism had reared its ugly head at a Christmas parade in the small town of Miller's Kill, NY. A former officer on Russ' team has gone missing, possibly while working undercover. Plot ensues and as the Christmas season progresses, it is clear that evil exists simultaneously with good. This was an excellent, fast-paced mystery/thriller - although the topic is hitting way too close to home this week. This is a series I have loved and I was so happy to get at least one more installment with the characters.
I loved this book. It was wonderful to be back with Clare and Russ in Millers Kill and St. Albans. I especially loved the region the story is based on. It is familiar to me and my family. I could picture the scenery so clearly. The story was another excellent written thriller/mystery by Julia Spencer-Fleming. I am sad it is the last one in the series. I will now share this book with family so we can all chat about it!
It's so good to have these characters back! It's been a long 5 years or so without my Reverend Clare and Russ Van Alstyne fix. This one was eerily topical with the anti-immigrant, antisemitic, misogynistic, xenophobic militia. And that businessman-turned-Sheriff seemed a bit analogous to a certain "businessman"-turned-president, but that could just be me reading too much into it. Great read! Looking forward to the next one!
First 📖 of 2026! I really like this series though this one made me a bit sad with how realistic and present the anti semitism and white nationalism was. I like how familiar the Glens Falls Albany and Lake placid places are.
In this 10th book in the 'Reverend Clare Fergusson and Police Chief Russ Van Alstyne Mysteries', Russ and Clare - who live in Miller's Kill, New York - confront members of a White militia in the area. The series does have an arc for the main characters, but the mystery can be read as a standalone.
*****
Background: The Reverend Clare Fergusson was a military helicopter pilot for ten years until she retired to become an Episcopal priest and a major in the National Guard.
Clare's husband, Russ Van Alstyne, was a military cop and then the police chief in Miller's Kill until recently, when he was forced to retire for political reasons.
As the story opens, the Thanksgiving-Christmas season is gearing up, and Clare and Russ are celebrating with their 8-month-old son Ethan. At the moment, the family is watching 'The Greenwich Annual Lighted Tractor Parade' at the home of a friend, and enjoying the spectacle.
In the midst of the procession, a float passes with a woman giving out candy, and holding a banner that reads White Families Unite! Blood and Soil Are Our Heritage! Diversity Is A Code Word For White Genocide. Then the float's driver unfurls a sign that says Keep America's Christmas White.
The spectators start shouting, and Russ's friend jumps on the vehicle and starts a ruckus.
Clare and Russ rush over to quell the disturbance, and Clare even manages to 'befriend' the banner-wielding White supremacist woman, whose name is Meghan Smith.
This amity gets Clare and Russ invited to a barbecue at the home of Meghan and her husband Rick Smith, where Clare and Russ meet members of a local White militia.
This turns out to be auspicious for two reasons: an undercover police officer is missing, and a woman needs help - and both situations involve White supremacists.
» Police Officer Kevin Flynn, who worked in Miller's Kill until he transferred to the Syracuse Police Department, is on leave and hasn't contacted his family for months.
From Assistant State's Attorney Yíxīn Zháo, who worked with Kevin in Syracuse......
......Russ learns that Kevin infiltrated a group of militia types upstate, in the Adirondack Park. Russ also finds out that the militia types call themselves 'Knox's Noble Train', and talk a lot about defending their liberties and their way of life.
With this information, Russ and Police Officer Hadley Knox - who was Kevin's girlfriend when he was a cop in Miller's Kill - plan to locate the militia's campsite in Adirondack Park, find Kevin, and get him out.
Russ and Hadley are joined by Native American forest ranger Paul Terrance, whose uncle - also a forest ranger - went missing in Adirondack Park.
Clare borrows a spotter plane, and flies Russ, Hadley, and Paul over the park to locate the militia's campsite.
Afterwards, Russ, Hadley, and Paul head into the wilderness, and find the body of Paul's uncle in a shallow grave.
Paul heads back to inform law enforcement agencies, and Yíxīn Zháo works on the bureaucratic side of arresting the guilty parties.
Meanwhile, Russ and Hadley locate the Knox's Noble Train encampment, and observe that the militia - whose members include law enforcement and military personnel - are organized, savvy, and well-protected.
The militia also has the makings of bombs and explosives, which they presumably plan to use. The 'good guys' just have to figure out what the target is, and how to stop the attack.
While all this is going on, Clare is back in Miller's Kill, attempting to help a woman in a domestic abuse situation.
» Tiny, a mother Clare met at the home of Meghan and Rick Smith, is married to Calvin March, a fanatical White supremacist. Calvin is controlling, barely lets Tiny leave the house, doesn't allow her to have any visitors, and hits her when he gets angry.
Clare makes it her mission to extricate Tiny from the abusive home, but Tiny is frightened, cowed, and unwilling to involve the police. As for Calvin, he's vengeful, wily, and a core member of 'Knox's Noble Train'. All this leads to big trouble.
As the story unfolds, Russ's and Clare's plotlines merge and lead to an exciting climax.
Like other books in the series, this novel is chock full of danger, action, and adventure. The story is also very relevant to current times, with bigots spewing toxic hatred.
Assuming the series continues, I'll be curious to see where Russ goes from here. Without his job as police chief, Russ is at loose ends, and he needs something to do besides helping raise baby Ethan.
This is an exciting adventure/suspense story, recommended to fans of the genre.
Thanks to Netgalley, Julia Spencer-Fleming, and Minotaur for an ARC of the book.