Nathan Active is back after a long absence, longer for me actually than for the series. THE BIG EMPTY does not measure up to the promise of the first books in the series but will keep you turning the pages. Consider this book equivalent to an episode of MANNIX, fine for a bit, not CHINATOWN, a classic that will stay with you forever.
I would consider the first four books in the series close to classics. The Alaskan wilderness and Inupiat culture dominated the stories as central characters. Nathan Active, an Inupiat law enforcement officer raised by a white couple in Anchorage, touchingly connected with the cultural stresses Alaskans endured. After I read VILLAGE OF THE GHOST BEARS in 2009, there was a long period of silence in the series, and I lost track so much that the publication of a new entry in the series in 2016, TUNDRA KILL, entirely escaped me. So, when I accidentally discovered THE BIG EMPTY, there was a longer interregnum between reads for me than for most and that may have factored into my feelings that this book was more superficial than previous efforts. The authors (yes, now there is a co-author who writes with Stan Jones, by the name of Patricia West) cover the back story for the primary characters adequately, though without creating a sense of urgency that would seem natural. The relationship between Nathan and Grace, his wife, does not click. Nathan seems oddly passive and Grace overly mercurial. Nita, their daughter, is often presented as the caricature of a teenager. Given the trio of back stories here, these characteristics are understandable on the surface, so I do not want to overstate this criticism. It is just that the family relationships do not ring true. They seem artifical. The relationships between Nathan and his deputy, and with the pilot "Cowboy", are better, though some of the banter about the use of the work "Eskimo" seems forced in to make a point.
The plot is a standard procedural, including a clever murder plan and a realistic and empathetic villain, though the conclusion is predictable. There are many opportunities in the world Stan Jones has created for vivid stories. At its best Nathan Active's world is one of the hidden gems in current mystery series. I will be paying attention moving forward for the next effort.
Nathan Active flies
at the end of this novel,
kind of like Garp did.