The Drowning Man, Margaret Coel
The Drowning Man, Margaret Coel
List: $19.99 | Sale: $13.99
Club: $9.99

The Drowning Man

Author: Margaret Coel

Narrator: Andrea Bates

Unabridged: 11 hr 6 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 02/15/2008


Synopsis

The twelfth title in the series finds the Wind River Reservation without another one of its sacred petroglyphs. The Red Cliff canyon has been home to these sacred petroglyphs, and their accompanying sacred spirits, for a few thousand years. Seven years a

Reviews

Goodreads review by James on June 18, 2011

Someone has stolen The Drowning Man, an ancient petroglyph that had been carved into the walls of a sacred canyon on the Wind River Reservation in Wyoming. The Arapahos who live on the reservation are shattered by the theft, and the assumption is that someone has chiseled out the petroglyph and sold......more

Goodreads review by Jeff on October 17, 2018

Another good entry into the Wind River Reservation series. In this one Vicky and Father John must solve who is stealing valuable artifacts from a sacred canyon. Vicky and Adam Lone Eagle continue to have their problems, both personally and with the law practice. I wish Father John would just jump he......more

Goodreads review by Sandra on August 22, 2009

After the Drowning Man petroglyph is removed from a canyon wall and then offered to the highest bidder, Father John and Vicky feel compelled to help find the perpetrators of this crime. This is not the first time a petroglyph or other artifacts have been stolen and as they try to help the tribal lea......more

Goodreads review by Julie on September 01, 2017

It's official: I'm done with this series. I enjoyed them at first but now I'm just annoyed and I like the main characters less and less, especially Vicki. Whodunit? Whatever new white characters are introduced. If you read only one or two books, this isn't so glaring, but by book #12 in the series, I......more

Goodreads review by Mieczyslaw on October 31, 2012

Margaret Coel does it again! Initially I found this book slow and not easy to settle into but I believe that was largely down to the fact that I'd just read a fast-paced thriller; Coel is much gentler. Her world is that of the Plains Indians; wide, big sky and a sense of loss. She peoples it with st......more