
Free Fire by C.J. Box continues the compelling saga of now former game warden Joe Pickett and his family as he is given another chance to regain his job when he accepts a confidential assignment from the governor that takes him to Yellowstone National Park.
Pickett had been dismissed from his game warden position in the previous novel and starts off this one working as a ranch hand for his mother-in-law’s new husband. A case has broken when a murderous lawyer slays four people in a corner of Yellowstone National Park that is some kind of legal free fire zone. There may not be a way to prosecute this attorney, but Pickett is tasked with uncovering a motive. When some of his new colleagues are attacked or killed, Pickett starts to understand that there are some secrets that threaten many people, and some of those are willing to add him to the body count.
Box hits on an interesting idea that one can lure his intended victims to some zone where the normal laws prohibiting murder don’t apply as they would in anywhere else in the country.
Anyway, I found the novel enjoyable, but I am likely a pretty consistent C.J. Box reader. There isn’t much that’s groundbreaking, but it remains interesting. Pickett and his family remain compelling because they try so hard to be conventional and normal in many ways, but they keep getting thrust into dangerous situations because of his career.
It’s a pretty enjoyable and interesting entry into the series, but it’s not quite a homerun.
Next up, I am returning to the realm of the supernatural with House of Secrets by Darcy Coates.