Dyed in the Green by George Mercer – Ben
Matthews arrives at Cape Breton Highlands National Park in Nova Scotia as the
new Assistant Chief Park Warden. The park is located in the northern part of
the island and spans the island.
Matthews is joining his girlfriend, Kate Jones, a
seasonal warden at the park. Life is a little more complicated with Matthews
being the supervisor of Jones.
The park is in the midst of Acadian Nova Scotia.
French is spoken as much as English. The Acadians see themselves as distinct
from the English population.
Matthews arrives with a clear purpose. He is committed
to the ideal of protecting the park from poachers. In recent years park wardens
have not vigorously sought out poachers. Some local residents have been making
a habit of poaching salmon and deer.
In particular, John Donald Moores views the park as a
part of his regular hunting grounds. While he earns an income from commercial
fishing he is a passionate hunter and fisher of salmon.
Moores is a man who believes rules and laws were meant
for other people. At times contemptuous of the wardens he also views poaching
as a game. There is a thrill in outwitting the wardens.
As is the way of governments throughout the world not
all rules make sense. All hunting is prohibited in the park but non-commercial
fishing for salmon is allowed.
Catching poachers means long lonely hours for the
wardens. They will have all night patrols and stakeouts. On cold fall nights
they bring sleeping bags to get some warmth.
Tensions can run high if the wardens confront a
poacher. Still when murder occurs it is startling.
American readers may be surprised to know the wardens
of 20 years ago and earlier did not carry firearms as they patrolled the parks.
They confronted poachers, often armed, without guns themselves. Some carried
guns, contrary to regulation, but many were unarmed.
Matthews fits well with the other wardens and park
personnel. His staff sees him spending as much or more time as themselves on
night duty.
I enjoyed learning about the life of park wardens some
years ago, Parks Canada as explained by Mercer, re-organized in 2008 and there
are no longer wardens. At the same time I do not think I will read another in
the series.
It is an earnest book. Mercer clearly loves Canada’s
national parks and the park wardens with whom he worked for over 30 years. I am
sure, as with other professions, that almost all of them are dedicated to their
work. At the same time I am sure that they have never thought of themselves as
saints. The only flaw I could detect in Matthews is that he is a workaholic,
overly dedicated, to being a warden. The other wardens except for Joe, on the verge
of retirement, are equally without blemish. Joe’s flaw is a more relaxed
approach to being a warden that is reflective of his age and impending
retirement.
I certainly do not need sleuths to be dysfunctional
individuals but they need to be real people.
I know exactly what you mean, Bill. A character doesn't have to be, say, drowning in drink in order to be interesting. But I want my characters to feel authentic. And that means they make mistakes, have faults, and so on. Still, the setting for this interests me a lot. And the issue of poaching is a real one.
ReplyDeleteMargot: Thanks for the comment. The setting and topic were certainly interesting and a departure from most crime fiction.
DeleteI like the sound of this - and I love that cover!
ReplyDeleteMoira: The cover is perfect. All the covers in the series are distinctive and catch your eye in bookstores.
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