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Hawk moon

the Robert Payne mystery series

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Two beautiful Indian women are found dead with their noses cut off-an old Indian practice to punish infidelity-in this suspenseful second mystery by best-selling author Ed Gorman. The mutilation murders stun the quiet Iowa town of Cedar Rapids and call for the special skills of criminal psychologist Robert Payne, who uses clues from the crime scene to piece together a psychological portrait of the killer. The prime suspect is another Indian, David Rhodes, who is estranged from his wife, police detective Cindy Rhodes-and the woman with whom Payne is starting to fall in love. David Rhodes may have been morally outraged, because the two murdered women were exploiting young girls in a prostitution ring. However, Payne discovers that the crime bears an eerie resemblance to a case involving a young Indian brave at the turn of the century.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 1, 1996
      The second appearance of psychological profile investigator Robert Payne, introduced in Blood Moon, is a two-dimensional, convoluted tale about similar savage killings in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, separated by 90 years. Payne finds himself assisting Cindy Rhodes, a Native American cop whose estranged husband is suspected in the brutal slayings of two Indian women, both of whom are found with their noses cut off. Payne, a widower who is attracted to Cindy, starts to believe David Rhodes may in fact be the murderer, although the involvement of two of Cedar Rapids' finest citizens in the case begins to puzzle him. Interspersed throughout are flashbacks following a young policewoman's investigation of similar homicides in 1903. Gorman's depiction of the white and Indian interactions seems accurate, if somewhat heavy-handed, while the plot, which moves forward at a steady pace, occasionally turns on contrivances. And while the characters are more than stereotypes, their motivations are sometimes murky as the story advances to a conclusion in which more deaths occur and the pairs of murders from both ends of this century are connected.

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  • English

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