As with the previous books in this series, the story is a briskly paced page turner. I think what makes this series interesting is Ella Clah's struggle to find and maintain harmony. She combines Anglo and Navajo ways, and the conflict between these two cultures makes for an interesting landscape to the plots. The cultural conflict is not just between Navajo and non-Navajo. There is also the tension between the traditionalist, modernist, and new-traditionalist Navajos. The cultural information that is woven into the story is what makes this mystery, as with the preceding books (and I expect with the stories that follow), unique, complex, & engrossing. This story can be read out of order as the authors provide sufficient background on previous incidents that the reader is not mystified by what happened in previous stories. However, character development along with a fuller appreciation of Navajo culture is a richer experience by reading this series in order.