In C.J. Box’s fourth highway book “Paradise Valley” Cassie Dewell, Bakken County Sheriff’s Department Chief Investigator and single parent, is about to have a bad day. A really bad day…
Over the last three years, and the previous two books in the series, Cassie Dewell has been on the hunt for Ron Pergram, a long-haul truck driver and serial killer known as the Lizard King, responsible for the deaths of many young women working truck stops around the country.
Cassie has been working with Leslie Behaunek, Wilson County Prosecutor, and her FBI Special Agent, Craig Rhodine, to find a way to capture the Lizard King. It’s been a long time coming as
Cassie has patiently put together a trap to catch the man responsible for the death of her former police partner and mentor, Cody Hoyt. The plan involves Ron Pergram making a pickup at a nearby depot where they can arrest him and put an end to his continuing crimes. Finally, the Lizard King has taken the bait and he's on the way.
That is… Until things go wrong. Horribly and painfully wrong…. For Cassie, her team, and others in support roles. Lives are lost and permanent injuries are suffered. Someone has to take the political blame so that law enforcement can save face, and that someone is Cassie, who faces an investigation and the loss of her job by a vengeful District Attorney.
On the very same day, Kyle Westergaard, a troubled youth that Cassie has been helping take care of and friends with her son, Ben, has disappeared along with another youth, Raheem Johnson. The story is the two of them had been planning an adventure down the Missouri river in a wooden boat that they had been fixing up.
Kyle’s grandmother, Lottie, immediately demands that Cassie help find him, just to make sure he’s safe, but not drag him back home. Lottie’s tried the police, but they are busy with the fallout of the Lizard King’s fiasco, they pay her no heed.
Since Cassie has been freed up, she feels a responsibility to find Kyle and make sure he’s okay. It doesn’t take long after her search gets started that she starts to get a scary feeling that Kyle and Raheem’s disappearance may somehow be connected to her own troubles with the Lizard King. The bigger problem is that she’s on her own without any law enforcement resources or backups to help her out this time. She is on her own, hunting down the most cunning and ruthless psychotic killer she’s ever known…
In my mind, this book serves as book three of a trilogy, concluding the ongoing storylines started in “The Highway” and continued in “Badlands”. “Paradise Valley” provides a great conclusion to those storylines and character arcs, as well as completely endearing me to Cassie Dewell. I love how she has both taken on certain investigative aspects of Cody Hoyt, while at the same time, maintaining her own code of behavior. She is her own person. One that doesn’t blame others and takes responsibility for her own actions and the members of her team. She keeps her promises, or will die trying to keep them.
Like C.J. Box’s most well-known character, Joe Pickett, Cassie is driven to do what she believes is right, even if her tactics are grayer than Joe’s. And she is most definitely willing to pull the trigger without thinking about it twice. And just like Joe struggles with his mother-in-law, Cassie struggles with her mother, but she needs her to help raise her son, Ben, causing a conundrum in their relationship and communications. And I am going to admit this out loud. Even though she ranges from 10 to 20 pounds overweight at different points in the series, I’ll be danged if I don’t find her attractive. There is just something about her that gets my attention and connects with me. Okay, enough of that.
C.J. Box hits all three key elements – plotting, character, and setting – like the masterful writer that he is. There are strong emotional costs and winning payoffs to the storylines that he’s built up over the three books. He delivered another winning blend of mystery and thriller that I thoroughly devoured, packed full of intense conflict and high-octane storytelling prose. As with previous books in this series, the plotting was masterfully crafted and delivered. Another tight-knit, thrill ride, adventure. The small town and small city settings, as well as the Yellowstone mountains also played key character type equivalent roles. C.J. Box finds creative and interesting ways to use those settings to create wild west type situations where investigating crime is its own untamed adventure.
As mentioned in my previous reviews of this series, C.J. Box continues his practice of using two points of view – that of Cassie Dewell (adult) and Kyle (young/teenage boy). Using both an adult character and that of a younger boy provides an interesting contrast in perspectives that serves the storylines very well. I found myself just as impressed with Kyle in this one as I was in the last one. C.J. Box uses a young person’s point of view to his advantage by demonstrating his lack of experience and maturity to distort what’s going on and not expecting him to figure everything out like an adult might be able to do. It certainly amplifies the tension and concern for Kyle’s ability to survive.
Overall, this was strong 4.5-star rating for me. The characters, plotting, and setting all came together to deliver a winning reading experience, especially since it was the culmination of storylines spread out over three books. I am already two chapters into the next Cassie Dewell novel – “The Bitterroots” – which shows how appreciative I am to have another C.J. Box series to binge on! Just like Joe Pickett, I cannot get enough Cassie Dewell…