Murder on the Iditarod Trail

by Sue Henry

Jessie Arnold (1)

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"Adrenaline-pumping . . . [A] polished action mystery . . . [with] dazzling Arctic sights." —Marilyn Stasio, The New York Times Book Review

Winner of the Macavity Award and the Anthony Award

Murder on the Iditarod Trail is a gripping mystery set during Alaska's world-famous Iditarod: a grueling eleven-hundred-mile dogsled race across hazardous Arctic terrain.

It is an arduous sport, but not a deadly one. But suddenly the top Iditarod contestants are dying in bizarre ways: first a show more veteran musher smashes into a tree, then competitors begin turning up dead, with each murder more brutal than the last. State trooper Alex Jensen begins a homicide investigation, determined to track down the killer before more blood stains the pristine Alaskan snow. Meanwhile, Jessie Arnold, Alaska's premier female musher, has a shot at winning for the first time. But as her position in the race improves, so do her chances of being the killer's next target.

As the mushers thread their way through the treacherous trails, Jessie and Jensen are drawn deep into the frozen heart of the perilous wild: where nature can kill as easily as a bullet and only the Arctic night can hear your final screams.

"Engrossing . . . The howling winds, the snow, the ice, the dancing away from wolves, the crazing fatigue, the welcome heat and food, are almost palpable." —Los Angeles Times Book Review

"Excellent . . . well-paced, well-conceived, engrossing . . . moves along like a healthy, well-trained dog team." —Anchorage Times

"A book that will give you a feel for how the Iditarod is . . . Sue Henry has a genius for characterization, plot, and setting." —Mystery News

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14 reviews
I don't remember how I learned about this title but I purchased it as a Christmas gift for my mother as I was in awe of her description of being taken for a short sled ride when she was the only volunteer to get on the sled as part of an excursion tour during an Alaska cruise. I was surprised to see this title again recently when one of the characters in another novel was said to be reading this book. In the past few days it has been my turn to read it. I don't think I've imagined being that cold since reading "61 Hours" (Jack Reacher, Book 14) by Lee Child as that novel's setting is during a brutally cold winter in South Dakota.

Although I had certainly been aware of the Iditarod Trail Race prior to my mother's trip, I don't think I had show more thought about the severity of the unforgiving cold temperatures. Sue Henry brings to life with vivid descriptions the trail terrain, the brutally cold temperatures, the dedication of the mushers not only to the sport of the race but to their prior strategy planning with flexibility during the race, and to the training and ongoing care of their dog teams with special attention given during the race itself. Within this extraordinary annual race setting, the author has created an engrossing, page-turning mystery with the murders of Iditarod participants along the various legs of the grueling race.

In searching for biographical information about the author after reading this novel, it came as no surprise to learn that Sue Henry lived in Alaska for over 30 years. With her words as her artistic brush, she paints the majesty and beauty of the landscape and portrays respect for the land and its perils as only someone could portray with a personal experience of living in this state through many seasons. Another gift of this reading experience is the interspersed history of the trail points and race itself that flows naturally within the storyline without sounding like bullet points from a fact sheet. I have never had the desire to travel and visit Alaska, not even after reading this novel. Still, it has given me a new appreciation for everyone who lives in Alaska and to hold in awe all that choose to participate in the Iditarod Trail Race.

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Fun murder mystery during the middle of an Iditarod race with a little romance thrown in. The murders pop up in sudden and brutal ways causing the 'da da dummmmm' tones to go off in my head. (Do other people hear that too when someone dies in a book?)

I liked the book well enough to give it 5 stars but the author crosses the line that all dog lovers detest. It is perfectly fine to kill as many people as you want between the covers of a book, but if you hurt or kill a dog, even we just don't like it. Yah, brutal deaths of people or dogs can have a big emotional impact, but still no.

I did find some good quotes to share. Here is some of the more interesting brutal details:

'His headlamp shattered as it hit. So did his nose and cheek. A show more wicked, foot-long limb projected from the side of the trunk. Cold and sharp, it entered his closed right eye and pushed through his brain until it hit the back of his skull. There it stopped. His body hung against the trunk of the spruce until his weight broke the limb and he fell slowly onto the trail.'

'The sled was flung out and over the edge of the cliff by the violence of the parting. had only a breath to realize she was airborne as the sled left the trail and fell, tumbling down the side of the hill, toward the icy river six hundred feet below.'

Then mysteries always have their common little sayings:

“I think you better take this,” she said, her eyes wide. “There's been another accident. In Happy Valley.”

“Murder is what’s going on. I can’t say it plainer. Someone is killing mushers. We don’t know why, or who. But we will. I just don’t want any more of you to die. If we stop the race now, the deaths will probably stop too. You had all better think about that carefully.”

I liked this next little expression that you need to get a clue on who and what is going on to build a murder case. Don't know if it is new from this book or what:

'“Whoa. You can’t build a fence without posts,” Alex cautioned him.'

the book is filled with great authentic details on Alaska and the race. I liked this bit on the operators of the snow machines who clear the paths for the race:

'The snow machine drivers, dressed in layers of outer. wear to repel the worst the Arctic can deliver, may cover the full thousand miles without a good night’s sleep and with few hot meals. A bed becomes something they dreamed of once; a hot shower, only a memory. They develop shoulders the envy of linebackers. But when they try to explain the pale, empty nights on the ice of Norton Sound, or the northern lights so bright they reflect off the snow in the Farewell Burn, wistful looks come over their wind and sunburned faces and they drift into silence or stammering attempts at description. Many come back year after year, addicted to the trail.'

And my last and favorite quote which I am sure contains the way I am sure racers feel about the race:

'“I told you this is my fifth Iditarod. I don’t think you understand what that means. It means I’ve been breeding dogs, raising them, working with them all these years to prepare for this race. Every race is this race. As soon as | got home from my first race I started putting together the best team I could train. Every year I do that.

“I’ve bought dogs, traded them, tried them out, found out what kind of pups turn into good racers, sold and gotten rid of as many as I kept. With a lot of hard work, I’ve built a racing machine. I know which dogs will go in any kind of cold, which run best in the wind, and which can take the weather without dehydrating. We understand each other. Tank knows, almost before I do, what I want and what to do about it. He’s a great leader. And the rest know me, trust me and what I ask them to do. They love it, the running, as much as I| do. I Jove it, Alex, or I wouldn’t do it.'

Ratings are often hard. I could have given this book 5 stars but chose to give it one less as a warning to others that dogs die. But besides that, great book :-)
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Fun murder mystery during the middle of an Iditarod race with a little romance thrown in. The murders pop up in sudden and brutal ways causing the 'da da dummmmm' tones to go off in my head. (Do other people hear that too when someone dies in a book?)

I liked the book well enough to give it 5 stars but the author crosses the line that all dog lovers detest. It is perfectly fine to kill as many people as you want between the covers of a book, but if you hurt or kill a dog, even we just don't like it. Yah, brutal deaths of people or dogs can have a big emotional impact, but still no.

I did find some good quotes to share. Here is some of the more interesting brutal details:

'His headlamp shattered as it hit. So did his nose and cheek. A show more wicked, foot-long limb projected from the side of the trunk. Cold and sharp, it entered his closed right eye and pushed through his brain until it hit the back of his skull. There it stopped. His body hung against the trunk of the spruce until his weight broke the limb and he fell slowly onto the trail.'

'The sled was flung out and over the edge of the cliff by the violence of the parting. had only a breath to realize she was airborne as the sled left the trail and fell, tumbling down the side of the hill, toward the icy river six hundred feet below.'

Then mysteries always have their common little sayings:

“I think you better take this,” she said, her eyes wide. “There's been another accident. In Happy Valley.”

“Murder is what’s going on. I can’t say it plainer. Someone is killing mushers. We don’t know why, or who. But we will. I just don’t want any more of you to die. If we stop the race now, the deaths will probably stop too. You had all better think about that carefully.”

I liked this next little expression that you need to get a clue on who and what is going on to build a murder case. Don't know if it is new from this book or what:

'“Whoa. You can’t build a fence without posts,” Alex cautioned him.'

the book is filled with great authentic details on Alaska and the race. I liked this bit on the operators of the snow machines who clear the paths for the race:

'The snow machine drivers, dressed in layers of outer. wear to repel the worst the Arctic can deliver, may cover the full thousand miles without a good night’s sleep and with few hot meals. A bed becomes something they dreamed of once; a hot shower, only a memory. They develop shoulders the envy of linebackers. But when they try to explain the pale, empty nights on the ice of Norton Sound, or the northern lights so bright they reflect off the snow in the Farewell Burn, wistful looks come over their wind and sunburned faces and they drift into silence or stammering attempts at description. Many come back year after year, addicted to the trail.'

And my last and favorite quote which I am sure contains the way I am sure racers feel about the race:

'“I told you this is my fifth Iditarod. I don’t think you understand what that means. It means I’ve been breeding dogs, raising them, working with them all these years to prepare for this race. Every race is this race. As soon as | got home from my first race I started putting together the best team I could train. Every year I do that.

“I’ve bought dogs, traded them, tried them out, found out what kind of pups turn into good racers, sold and gotten rid of as many as I kept. With a lot of hard work, I’ve built a racing machine. I know which dogs will go in any kind of cold, which run best in the wind, and which can take the weather without dehydrating. We understand each other. Tank knows, almost before I do, what I want and what to do about it. He’s a great leader. And the rest know me, trust me and what I ask them to do. They love it, the running, as much as I| do. I Jove it, Alex, or I wouldn’t do it.'

Ratings are often hard. I could have given this book 5 stars but chose to give it one less as a warning to others that dogs die. But besides that, great book :-)
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The mystery part of the book was pretty obvious from the get-go. It is the setting of the race and all the details and history of the event that Henry includes that makes this book an interesting read.
The author really puts you on the sleds right along with the mushers and their dogs! The mystery is good but there were two passages that were slightly messed up, as if the author’s attention slipped and the mistakes weren’t caught by editors, and it spoiled the flow of the story temporarily but the strength of the writing was so good that it didn’t matter. Highly recommended.
I’ve been meaning to read this book for a long time because Sue Henry also writes a series of mysteries with a woman RVer that I have enjoyed. I knew that this book was her first and that it had won awards (Anthony Award for Best First Mystery and Macavity Award for Best First Mystery). After reading this book I can say that the awards were well deserved.
The Iditarod Trail is a race of more than 1000 miles run by dogsleds between Anchorage and Nome Alaska. It is a test of the dog handler’s skill, the dogs’ endurance and the ability of all to withstand the chilling temperatures, the long hours, the physical challenges of the terrain and whatever weather gets thrown at them. When you add in someone who decides to commit murder the show more odds are really stacked against the competitors. Trooper Alex Jensen gets called in to investigate when one veteran musher is killed when he impacts a tree and a sharp branch penetrates through his eye into his brain. Although they are not sure he was murdered it looks very suspicious. Before any decision can be made on that death another occurs further down the trail and this time it is pretty clear it was caused by someone cutting almost through a line on the sled. There was a murderer on the race. Jensen becomes friendly with Jessie Arnold, a woman racer, and she gives him some tips about the race. Before long the two of them realize they are attracted to each other. Now Jensen has a personal reason for wanting to catch the killer.
Along the trail, from checkpoint to checkpoint, we follow the racers and Jensen and his team. One other racer is killed and several more are injured badly enough to be scratched from the race. Will Jessie be the next one? Or will she hang on to win first place? Read the book to find out. I guarantee you will be caught up in the excitement.
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A really enjoyable mystery that takes place during Alaska's Iditarod race. At times I did get a bit overwhelmed with all the details about the Iditarod, and trying to keep track of all the characters, but the unique setting and good story held my attention and made this an interesting read.

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17+ Works 3,545 Members
Sue Henry is a former college administrator. She writes the Jessie Arnold Mystery series and the Maxie and Stretch Mystery series. Murder on the Iditarod Trail won the Mystery Readers International Macavity Award for Best First Novel in 1992 and the Anthony Award. It was made into a TV movie starring Kate Jackson and Corbin Bernsen three years show more later. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Murder on the Iditarod Trail
Original publication date
1991
People/Characters
Alex Jensen; Jessie Arnold; Tank (sled dog)
Important places
Nome, Alaska, USA; Alaska, USA
Important events
Iditarod Sled Dog Race
Dedication
In memory of my father,
C. A. "JACK" HALL
First words
The Iditarod Trail out of Skwentna, Alaska, ran easy and level, bending its way northwest for miles through snow-covered muskeg.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"Mine. Yours has too many dogs in it."
Canonical DDC/MDS
813.54
Canonical LCC
PS3558.E534

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Mystery
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3558 .E534Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
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Popularity
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Reviews
14
Rating
½ (3.61)
Languages
English, German
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
13
UPCs
1
ASINs
4