A very satisfying read. Introducing Mercy Gunderson: flawed, brave, conflicted and compelling. She is a beautifully drawn character, and carries this first installment of the series. While this is a mystery, the complex and multiple themes and issues make, in my opinion, a literary story as well. Armstrong portrays the bleak life of a Reservation's poverty and hopelessness in an arresting atmosphere, and page-turning plot. Vulnerable, young Indian men are confronted with prejudice and boredom, betrayed by their leaders and elders. We are all aware of the seemingly cursed legacy of the Kennedys, so the multiple tragedies of the Gunderson family are not unbelievable, and create overwhelming problems for the characters.
I was seduced by Mercy. Far from one dimensional, the first person narrative reveals her attraction to firm-bodied cowboys, her fondness for whiskey and mint flavored tobacco (yikes, I have never encountered a woman who chews), fighting and assassin-prone solutions to criminals. She is a study in contrasts, cold versus feeling, narrowed sight versus insightful. Mercy is an enigma to the town, friends and neighbors unaware of what she did in the Army or why she has come home. Her best friend is unsympathetic. Mercy struggles with her identity, as white and Indian, her place as both a strong and competent covert ops sniper, on medical leave after being wounded in the Mideast, and a compassionate caring and doubting daughter, sister, aunt, who is the executor and leader of a 75,000 acre struggling ranch in South Dakota. There she faces the racial tensions of white and Indian cultures, corrupt land developers, family issues, murder, and her own fears and failures. She fled the cloying closeness of community and family shared tragedies for a sense of freedom. Now she returns to a place to which she belongs, something that the refugees of Afghanistan didn't have. She sees new possibilities in the ranch.
In the whole, however, this is story about loss: loss of freedom, loss of family, loss of competency and sight, loss of jobs, loss of dignity, loss of place and ultimately, loss of life. I was slack-jawed at the twist in the end. I am so looking forward to the second in this saga, to see how Mercy grows over the course of her life changes.