![](https://image.librarything.com/pics/fugue21/magnifier-left.png)
![From Sweetgrass Bridge by Anthony Bidulka](https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/P/1988754542.01._SX180_SCLZZZZZZZ_.jpg)
Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.
Loading... From Sweetgrass Bridge (edition 2024)by Anthony Bidulka (Author)
Work InformationFrom Sweetgrass Bridge by Anthony Bidulka
None No current Talk conversations about this book. ![]() Thanks to LibraryThing and Anthony Bidulka for the gifted copy! Merry has returned home to Livingsky after a having been working in Vancouver. Her caseload has been light, so she has been working as a security guard. She is happy when a new email hops in her inbox and she quickly has the cousin of quarterback, Dustin Thomson, as a new client. Dustin has gone missing and Merry is hired to help find him. As she looks into the background of the Indigenous celebrity sportsman, looking for any answers to questions the police seem reluctant to share. On a secondary thread, we meet Roger whose wife has a design company located next to Merry’s PI office. Roger is the host of a true crime podcast. Roger/Stella...pronoun he and she...would dearly love to become part of the team at LSI and ever anxious to impress and has started an independent investigation into some anonymous letters Merry received after she first arrived. We see aspects of Merry’s personal challenges with the emotional side of her transition and her feelings of isolation. We also explore Roger’s psyche as he struggles to rationalize his need to be both Stella the podcaster and Roger, the electrician who is also a husband and father. The reader is lead through the layers of the investigation as well as Roger/Stella's anxieties. I had a bit of a problem with the Shared thoughts of more than one character, but it didn't happen too often, nor did it distract from the overall impact of the story. I found this to be a well-written book with some repeat appearances from Merry’s adventures from the first book, although both the first and second book easily stands alone. I particularly liked the dynamic Merry is establishing with her new acquaintances and hopefully she will have more luck in attracting clients going forward. no reviews | add a review
A nation holds its breath. On a perfect prairie summer evening, Saskatchewan Roughrider Dustin Thomson goes missing. As the Green & White's first primary quarterback born in the province and first Indigenous quarterback, Thomson is beloved and celebrated. Mistrusting the police investigation, the family hires Merry Bell P.I. to find the football star. From the dark waters below Sweetgrass Bridge to the lands of Little Turtle Lake First Nation, Merry seeks answers while dealing with her continuing transition, swelling loneliness, a floundering career, well-meaning crossdressing assistant and having to decide whether the people in her life are friend or foe. No library descriptions found. |
LibraryThing Early Reviewers AlumAnthony Bidulka's book From Sweetgrass Bridge was available from LibraryThing Early Reviewers. Current DiscussionsNone
![]() GenresRatingAverage:![]()
|
Merry, a transgender woman who has returned to her hometown after gender-affirming surgery, has set up shop as a private investigator. Her business has had few clients however, so she is happy to take a new case: to find a missing man, Dustin Thomson. Dustin is a celebrated player for the Saskatchewan Roughriders, the team’s first quarterback born in the province and first indigenous quarterback and a local hero. Merry begins by interviewing people connected to Dustin, including his roommate, teammates, and family. Though she has no employees, she does get assistance from Gerald Drover, her landlord; from Roger Brown, a cross-dressing true crime podcaster who is married to Brenda, a designer with an office next to Merry’s; and Veronica Greyeyes, a police detective who once arrested Merry.
Merry is as likeable as ever. What’s not to like about someone who recognizes the importance of having money for chocolate and wine? What is particularly admirable is her determination; even when she seems to hit dead ends and mistrusts her abilities, she falters only briefly before persevering. Though it’s summer and they probably don’t have bootstraps, I like to think of her pulling herself up by the bootstraps of her Louboutin designer boots! My admiration for her even increased when she chooses not to say something to Brenda in a conversation she has with her at the end of the book. What makes Merry authentic is that she has personal struggles with a floundering career and with emotions like isolation and loneliness. She also admits that she has not completed what she calls the four stages of the transition process.
It was fun to re-connect with other characters, all of whom remain faithful to their depictions in the first book: “a morally ambiguous, mullet-headed, flamingo-legged landlord; a prickly, serious-as-a-heart-attack cop; a true-crime obsessed crossdresser, and a sickly-sweet interior designer.” Of course there are new characters introduced as well. Admittedly, I have a personal bias, but my favourite new character is Doreen – besides the name, I can identify with some of her decrepitude (though I also like to think of myself as reliable and trustworthy)!
I love the writing style which is eminently readable. I like the pop culture references, like a coach delivering a “Ted-Lasso-worthy speech,” and the gentle humour sprinkled throughout. For instance, in a discussion with Greyeyes about a poem written by Dustin, Merry muses, “Getting information from Greyeyes was like pulling molars with needle nose pliers. Would it help if she asked her questions in iambic pentameter?”
The book draws some attention to issues affecting our First Nations peoples such as boil water advisories, lack of education and opportunities for youth, many cases of missing people, and high suicide rates. I understand the author’s wanting to explain these problems, but it’s awkward that Merry seems to know little or nothing about these problems, though she immediately understands the meaning of the word kôhkum?
My interest was maintained throughout such that I didn’t want to put down the book. Though I guessed the guilty early on, I certainly didn’t know the details. Though the resolution lacks some credibility, I did find that considerable effort was made to make it as convincing and believable as possible.
This is a thoroughly enjoyable read. Though From Sweetgrass Bridge can be read as a standalone, I suggest readers begin with Livingsky first if they have not already done so. I certainly look forward to seeing more of Merry and company – especially Doreen of course – in the next installment.
Note: Please check out my reader's blog (https://schatjesshelves.blogspot.com/) for over 1,000 reviews. (