Member Reviews

When Meg hears someone at her door during a blizzard, she is at first hesitant to let them in. She is miles from her nearest neighbour and has only a twelve-year old boy and a small puppy with her. However, her conscience overrides her trepidation when she learns that one of the two men outside is badly injured.

She should have never let them in!!!! It turns out that they are escaped prisoners, and one of them has a gunshot wound. They enlist her aid in trying to patch up the injured man, and threaten harm if she doesn’t comply. The uninjured man is tall with myriad snake tattoos on his neck and face. Though the obvious name for him would be Viper, the injured man calls him “The Professor” because he was once a professor at McGill University.

Phone service is out and so is the electricity. Meg sends Jid, who was outside stocking the woodpile, to go get help.

At her first opportunity, Meg puts the puppy in a backpack and escapes by snowshoe. Though it is dark and the blizzard is worsening, she wants to reach civilization and report the two men.

After trudging through the storm for ages, she encounters another man who has her young friend Jid hostage. Of course, he is an accomplice of the two men at her house, and he insists they return there. Turns out he is one of the leaders of a notorious biker gang and that the three men escaped custody together. When they return to the house, they tie Meg to a chair…

Circumstances worsen when the blizzard sends a tree crashing into the house…
Will Meg, Jid, and Shoni survive this ordeal?

MY THOUGHTS
I been reading a lot of books set in the U.K. lately, so thought it was high time I read one set in my home country of Canada. Mind you, this is a Canada very different from my own. For one thing, it is set 2,500 km north of where I live. For another, it is located next door to an Algonquin community.

When I first requested this title from NetGalley, I didn’t realize it was the seventh book in the Meg Harris series, but this time I can fully assure you that it reads very well as a stand-alone novel.

The setting was very well portrayed and I could easily imagine the dreadful weather, the beautiful house, and the frightening plight that Meg Harris finds herself in. I loved her references to the puppy, Shoni, and to the young native boy, Jid.

I grew impatient that the men were with Meg so long – yet that was the point. I’m sure Meg Harris thought the time was dragging as well. The story was suspenseful, and the ending satisfactory. Fraught with danger and suspense – and spiced with Native lore, this novel is sure to be enjoyed by many.

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A nice read - interesting, engaging and intriguing, a kind of a thriller package. Would recommend it to everyone interested int he genre.

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