Chasing Smoke: Difference between revisions
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Kadash is left to chase elusive leads among the bitter and broken widows of the dead men. Struggling with his own illness and with a growing rift between himself and his partner, Kadash finds himself entangled in a web of resentment, jealousy, and deceit. Ultimately, he finds that not is he only seeking a missing woman and the truth about the dead men, but also the meaning of his own life in the face of his impending mortality. | Kadash is left to chase elusive leads among the bitter and broken widows of the dead men. Struggling with his own illness and with a growing rift between himself and his partner, Kadash finds himself entangled in a web of resentment, jealousy, and deceit. Ultimately, he finds that not is he only seeking a missing woman and the truth about the dead men, but also the meaning of his own life in the face of his impending mortality. | ||
==Major Characters== | ==Major Characters== | ||
* [[ | * [[Skin Kadash]] | ||
* [[Ruby Jane Whittaker]] | * [[Ruby Jane Whittaker]] | ||
* [[Susan Mulvaney]] | * [[Susan Mulvaney]] | ||
* [[Richard Owen]] | * [[Richard Owen]] |
Revision as of 13:29, 1 May 2018
Chasing Smoke is the second book in the Skin Kadash mystery series.
Publication and Reception
Published in 2008, Chasing Smoke received a starred review from Library Journal [1] and was a finalist for the 2009 Spotted Owl Award. [2] It was also an IndieBound Notable Next for January 2009. [3]
General Information
Chasing Smoke is the only book in the series to feature only Skin as a point-of-view character. It is preceded by Lost Dog and followed by the short stories The Missus, Coffee, Black, and Sunlight Nocturne, and then the book Day One.
Jacket Copy
Portland homicide detective Skin Kadash just wants to survive cancer treatment so he can get back to the work he loves. When his partner tries to drag him into an unofficial investigation of a series of deaths, he’s not interested — he’s dead-dog sick and doesn’t need the grief — until she reveals the victims all suffered from cancer themselves, and all had one thing in common with Skin. His oncologist.
The deaths are all apparent suicides; the police have closed the book on them. Then a mysterious young woman, daughter of the first victim, surfaces and insists the dead men were all murdered. Before her story can be probed more deeply, she disappears, leaving Kadash with no support from the cops and little to go on except a nagging belief the missing woman knew more than she revealed.
Kadash is left to chase elusive leads among the bitter and broken widows of the dead men. Struggling with his own illness and with a growing rift between himself and his partner, Kadash finds himself entangled in a web of resentment, jealousy, and deceit. Ultimately, he finds that not is he only seeking a missing woman and the truth about the dead men, but also the meaning of his own life in the face of his impending mortality.