In the Forest of Harm
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5.0 • 1 Rating
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- $2.99
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- $2.99
Publisher Description
At the end of a long high-profile trial, Atlanta prosecutor Mary Crow is going home to North Carolina, and taking her two closest friends with her. The autumn Appalachians are gorgeous, and the women are looking forward to a long weekend away from city life. But the mountains can be equally hazardous, with rugged climbs, impenetrable fogs and treacherous cliffs. Add to the hostile terrain two predators bent on Mary's destruction. Mitchell Whitman seeks revenge for his brother's murder conviction while trapper Henry Brank loves to stalk the innocent victims who happen to cross his path. As her vacation turns hellish, Mary must make an awful choice--does she save one friend and lose the other? Or does she put the two of them at risk and rescue the third from undreamed of harm?
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
An assistant DA returns to the North Carolina mountain country of her youth in Bissell's hair-raising camping-trip-gone-wrong debut thriller. Half-Cherokee Mary Crow, Atlanta's hottest young prosecutor, has just won her sixth murder case when she decides to take her two best friends, Joan and Alex, along with her on a hiking vacation near Little Jump Off, N.C. She has hidden motives for revisiting her one-horse hometown: her mother was raped and murdered 12 years ago in the country store she managed, and Mary needs to come to terms with her death. But death still haunts the cursed countryside, and the three women find themselves in perilous situations, fighting for their lives with both a crazed mountain man and the obsessed brother of the Atlanta murderer, bent on revenge. When Alex is spirited away and Joan is raped, Mary must muster the strength to match wits with two deranged killers, calling upon her old tracking skills and deep knowledge of the forest. Meanwhile, her high school sweetheart, Jonathan Walkingstick, realizes something has gone wrong, and heads after the women up the mountain. Gory scenes abound in this punched-up female version of Deliverance, but Bissell is particularly good in describing how Alex, Joan and Mary's friendship sustains them and is strengthened over the course of their harrowing adventures. Even though the three women pop up cartoonishly each time they are felled, and their pursuers are supernaturally crafty, the tale compels with its depiction of desperate camaraderie and descriptions of gorgeous mountain scenery. A sequel seems likely, and the title is a natural for film or TV adaptation.