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Tony Hillerman's bestselling Navajo mysteries have thrilled millions of readers with their taut, intricate plotting, sensitive, subtle characterizations, and lyrical evocations of landscapes and cultures. Now he departs his trademark terrain and applies his talents to a story he has wanted to tell for decades about an ordinary man thrust into total chaos.
Until the telephone call came for him on April 12, 1975, the world of Moon Mathias had settled into a predictable routine. He knew who he was. He was the disappointing son of Victoria Mathias, the brother of the brilliant, recently dead Ricky Mathias, and a man who could be counted on to solve small problems. But the telephone caller was an airport security officer, and the news he delivered handed Moon a problem as large as Southeast Asia.
His mother, who should be in her Florida apartment, is fighting for her life in a Los Angeles hospital--stricken while en route to the Philippines to bring home a grandchild they hadn't known existed. The papers in her purse send Moon into a world totally strange to him. They lure him down the backstreets of Manila, to a rural cockfight, into the odd Filipino prison on Palawan Island, and finally across the South China Sea to where Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge is turning Cambodia into killing fields, and Communist rockets are beginning to fall on the outskirts of Saigon.
Those he meets on this quest are as trange to Moon as Asia itself. There is Lum Lee, and elderly Chinese man who wants Moon to finish a job left unfinished by Ricky's death. But is Lee seeking ancestral bones as he claims, or a shipment of opium lost in the chaos of war? There is Mrs. van Winjgaarden, a chic and sophisticated folk-art buyer who wants his help to save her missionary brother--if that is really her motive. Only Nguyen, warrior in a lost cause, will KILL COMMUNISTS tattooed on his chest, seems easy to understand. But the hardest of all for Moon to fathom if the mythical version of himself he finds among his brother's friends.
Finding Moon is many things: a latter-day adventure epic, a deftly orchestrated romance, an arresting portrait of an exotic realm engulfed in turmoil, and a neatly turned tale of suspense. Most of all, it is a singular story of how a plain, uncertain man finds his best self.
TONY HILLERMAN is past president of the Mystery Writers of America and has received their Edgar and Grand Master awards. Among his other honor are the Center for the American Indian's Ambassador Award, the Silver Spur Award for best novel set in the West, and the Navajo Tribe's Special Firend Award. His many bestselling novels include Sacred Clowns, Coyote Waits, and A Thief of Time. He lives with his wife, Marie, in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
319 pages, Hardcover
First published September 1, 1995
