Book 14 of Anna Pigeon Mysteries
Language: English
American Mystery & Suspense Fiction Detective Fiction Fiction - Mystery General Isle Royale (Mich.) Isle Royale National Park Isle Royale National Park (Mich.) Michigan Mystery Mystery & Detective Mystery & Detective - Women Sleuths Pigeon; Anna (Fictitious character) Rocky Mountain National Park (Colo.) Suspense Wilderness areas Women Sleuths Women park rangers wolves
Publisher: Putnam
Published: Apr 1, 2008
Description:
EDITORIAL REVIEW: **Anna Pigeon returns—in the remarkable new novel from the *New York Times*–bestselling writer.** It is January, and Park Ranger Anna Pigeon is sent to Isle Royale in Lake Superior to learn about managing and understanding wolves, as her home base of Rocky Mountain National Park might soon have their own pack of the magnificent, much-maligned animals. She’s housed in the island’s bunkhouse with the famed wolf study team, along with two scientists from Homeland Security, who are assessing the study with an eye to opening the park each winter—effectively bringing an end to the fifty-year study—so that it can be manned to secure the scrap of border with Canada. Soon after Anna’s arrival, the wolf packs under observation begin to act in peculiar ways. Giant wolf prints are found, and Anna spies the form of a great wolf from a surveillance plane. The discovery of wolf scat containing alien DNA leads the team to believe that perhaps a wolf/dog hybrid has been introduced to the island. When a female member of the team is savaged, Anna is convinced she is being stalked, and what was once a beautiful, idyllic refuge becomes a place of unnatural occurrences and danger beyond the ordinary. Alone on an island without electricity or running water, with temperatures hovering around zero both day and night, Anna fights not only for the wolves, but for also her own survival. Filled with the nail-biting suspense, richly drawn characters and gorgeous nature writing that are her hallmarks, *Winter Study* is vintage Barr, proving once again that she’s “a real writer, in every sense of the word” (*The Denver Post*).