|
|
Showing 1 - 24 of
24 matches in All Departments
Originally published in 2003, Covered Waters is a "forgotten
classic" by Joseph Heywood. Now back in print and featuring new
material, this collection of autobiographical essays and fishing
tales helps readers understand the extent of Heywood's passion for
the sport, especially in his native waters of Michigan. Covered
Waters covers an outdoorsman's wanderings and wonderings about
fishing and life, and how the two are often interconnected. These
episodes include reminiscences of his days in the U.S. Air Force,
training to drop nukes on the Soviet Union in the Cold War; his
temporary but intense obsession with bear hunting (which ended the
moment he finally killed a bear); and, of course, his international
adventures in fishing, recounting such hilarious scenes as two
women in France engaged in what appeared to be strip fishing. After
fishing the world over, Heywood finds that there is no water like
home water, and no fishing partners like old friends.
Autumn 1960. Nikita Khrushchev is politically adept, visionary, and
locked in a fight with the Politburo and a battle with Mao and the
Chinese. His country and his political future are in trouble
because he has opened doors to the West and espoused the doctrine
of peaceful coexistence. Meanwhile, the arms race is crushing the
Soviet economy and there is unrest throughout the Communist empire.
Changes are imperative. The army must be reduced, money redirected
to a consumer economy, and the US neutralized. But the old boars of
the Red Army will not be easily displaced; its leaders are intent
on saving their country from Khrushchev. A cabal of senior Red Army
patriots are led by a man who the world thinks is Khrushchev's
unswerving toady. The game is treason, and the tools are Albania's
mad-dog leaders, for whom assassination is second nature. What
begins subtly soon turns brittle. A rocket technician disappears
before a major accident at the Soviet Space Center. In Belgrade a
psychotic CIA agent escapes an ambush, vows revenge, and
disappears. Khrushchev turns to the Special Operations Group, the
elite hunting team featured in the author's prequel, THE BERKUT. In
Washington the Bay of Pigs invasion is in the final planning
stages, and its timing is tied to the missing CIA agent. He must be
found. Two teams, one from Russia and one from the United States,
begin a desperate hunt that leads them on an inward spiral toward
each other and to a lethal showdown at the 1961 summit in Vienna.
There they find themselves in an uneasy alliance as they race to
find the American renegade and the Albanian death team, both groups
pawns in a global chess game. With a vast canvas of disparate
characters and events, The Domino Conspiracy is a coruscating tour
de force. Breathtakingly suspenseful, it lays open the myths of the
Soviet monolith and reveals the delicate seeds of glasnost and
perestroika, movements that were not to flower until three decades
later. Readers know how the Soviet story ended; now they will see
how it all began.
A treasure chest of stories for Joseph Heywood fans, featuring the
women game-warden colleagues of his mystery series star Grady
Service. With Heywood's trademark ability to capture the eccentric
characters of the Michigan wilderness, his wonderful ear for
dialogue, and his vivid descriptions of hunting, fishing, and
outdoorsmanship, these stories will delight Heywood fans and entice
any reader who loves stories about the great outdoors or
law-and-order. The game wardens in these stories not only have to
contend with poachers, drug smugglers, and violent criminals, but
they must also confront the challenges of being women in a
wilderness law enforcement fraternity traditionally dominated by
men.
One legendary insect--enormous, white, and exceedingly
rare--attracts trout of such size that they couldn't possibly exist
in the world as we know it. But in Heywood's classic novel, such
things can and do exist.
Protagonist Bowie Rhodes, UPI reporter and expert fly fisherman,
had learned of the snowfly early in his childhood. It hatches every
seven to ten years, never on the same river twice, bringing to rise
trout so huge they would have to have lived forty years or more;
trout so wily that they never allow themselves to be caught--or
even seen; trout so hungry for this fly that they will risk
exposure to rise for the hatch. The snowfly is the sacred quest of
the most obsessed trout hunters, existing--it seems--only in myth
and in a lost manuscript.
Rhodes's reporting brings him to such sites as the jungles of
Vietnam, the labyrinth of Brezhnev's Soviet Union, and a poisoned
Canadian wasteland of uranium mines. His hunt for the manuscript,
meanwhile, takes him deep into his own heart of darkness.
Richly imaginative and sensual, the world of "The Snowfly" has
more mystery lurking beneath the surface waters than our own. Or
does it?
"Hard Ground" is a treasure chest of stories for lovers of the
outdoors, fans of smart crime fiction, and, of course, the legions
of Joseph Heywood fans. Featuring the game-warden colleagues of
Woods Cop star Grady Service, the tales in this collection follow
the men and women patrolling Michigan's wilds as they encounter
everything from poachers determined to defend their kills with
deadly resistance to drug pushers selling their wares at an Elvis
Convention camping retreat. There are search-and-rescue operations,
a rookie game warden's first day on the job, and much, much more.
With Heywood's trademark ability to capture the eccentric
characters of the Upper Peninsula, his wonderful ear for dialogue,
and his vivid descriptions of hunting, fishing, and
outdoorsmanship, these twenty-plus stories will delight Heywood
fans and entice any reader who loves stories about the great
outdoors or law-and-order. As an added bonus, one story features
Woods Cop protagonist Grady Service early in his career, while
another story stars Heywood's new series protagonist Lute Bapcat.
In a brilliant debut to a thrilling series, Grady Service gets news
that his nemesis, the head of an incestuous clan of poachers, is to
be released from prison. But something even more sinister is afoot
in the Mosquito Wilderness. Service must call upon his every
reserve to track, stalk, and capture the "ice hunter." For more on
Joseph Heywood and the Woods Cop Mysteries, visit the author's
website.
Joseph Heywood ratchets up the suspense in yet another WOODS COP
MYSTERY! Upper Michigan Conservation Officer Grady Service has a
case on his hands that doesn't make sense. A series of protests and
bombings by animal rights activists appears to have culminated in a
double murder at a wolf lab, which releases into the wild an
extraordinarily rare animal: a blue wolf. To the Ojibwa a blue wolf
represents good luck, unless it is captured or killed-and then it
is an omen of Armageddon. Service suspects that the murders aren't
what they seem to be when the FBI takes over the investigation and
reaches far beyond its jurisdiction. Meanwhile, an elusive poaching
ring sets its sights on wolves. Once again, Service must defend his
hallowed Mosquito Wilderness in a race against time when it becomes
clear that its final target is the blue wolf. Full of memorable
characters and steeped in the lives of woods cops, Blue Wolf in
Green Fire is also a masterpiece of suspense. This second book in
the Woods Cop series is a fully satisfying journey into the natural
world and beyond, into the terrifying extremes of human nature. For
more on Joseph Heywood and the Woods Cop Mysteries, visit
www.josephheywood.com
We last saw our hero in Mountains of the Misbegotten and Heywood
delivers an even more thrilling mystery. Lute Bapcat and Pinkhus
Zakov had been partners in the far northern counties of Michigan's
Upper Peninsula for years when in early 1917, Zakov suddenly
disappeared. A year later, Bapcat and Jordy (now 18) get a summons
to Marquette, by former President Teddy Roosevelt. (Bapcat had
served as a Roughrider with Roosevelt back in the day.) Roosevelt
tells them that Zakov was sent to Russia by the U.S. government to
find Russian Tsar Nicholas II, who abdicated and disappeared. Zakov
went into Russia in April 1917 and had been feared dead, until an
urgent message comes through a Swedish diplomat: Zakov wants Bapcat
and Jordy sent to Russia to assist him. In the midst of the flu
epidemic, a strange, Russian-born American marine major named Dodge
is assigned to lead them into and across Russia until they locate
Zakov. They dive deep into the heart of the Russian Fatherland as
the Revolution of 1917 turns into a full out Civil War, with a
level of chaos, random violence, and blood-letting far beyond
Bapcat's imagination.
From the author of the Woods Cop Mystery series comes a new
collection of stories about life in the Upper Peninsula. Heywood
offers a glimpse into the world his best loved characters came
from, like Grady Service, Limpy Allerdyce, and Luticious Treebone.
From the early 1900s to present day, Heywood shows the roots of
Yoopers and how their influence has spread across the peninsula.
Meet 'Didit Dave' and his sudden and unexpected promotion to police
chief, a dead man who doesn't make it to heaven but instead an old
bar in Kate's Bay, and several military veterans who had engaged in
each major US conflict and managed to return home. This collection
wouldn't be complete without a couple classic Heywood mysteries
featuring a new detective duo: Tribal police chief John Clash and
Houghton County Sheriff Nayar Sekhar. One thing is for certain, the
characters in this collection could only come from one place. For
Yoopers who are far and away (and some who are not so far away),
one thing is true for them all: They all want to return above the
bridge ASAP. Heywood's collection of stories shares why.
Strange things are happening to the black bears of the Upper
Peninsula. Grady Service is stumped until a Korean-born professor
is murdered by cyanide-laced figs that contain two freeze-dried
bear gall bladders. Sexy and suspenseful, Chasing a Blond Moon also
introduces a new twist in Grady's personal life: he meets a son he
never knew he had. Once again, Grady Service, the hard-boiled
conservation officer of this superb series set in Michigan's Upper
Peninsula, has a weird case on his hands. Strange things are
happening to the black bear population. Grady Service can't pin the
phenomenon on anyone or anything until a Korean-born professor from
Michigan Tech is murdered by cyanide-laced figs-and two
freeze-dried bear gall bladders are found among the figs. Service
is certain that poachers are at work, killing bears to fuel the
Asian market for traditional medicines. The animal-parts market is
highly organized, and its practitioners are ruthless and dangerous.
Grady's nemesis, Michigan's governor, has cut budgets so severely
that there are not enough conservation officers to cover the state.
Service finds himself filling in for colleagues, chasing illusive
poachers who leave little evidence, and wrestling with the usual
cast of eccentric and entertaining characters. And there is a new
twist in Grady's personal life: he meets a sixteen-year-old son he
never knew he had. Sexy, suspenseful, and full of action, perfect
dialogue, and unforgettable characters, Chasing a Blond Moon
confirms Heywood as one of the finest of his day.
In the sequel to Red Jacket, former Rough Rider turned Michigan
game warden Lute Bapcat sets out to find a deputy warden who has
disappeared from Ontonagon County, one of the Michigan Upper
Peninsula's most lawless places. Merely hours into his search,
Bapcat is shot by assailants unknown. After a miraculous rescue and
recovery aided by mysterious caretakers, Bapcat uncovers a plan by
powerful locals to capture and sell bears to zoos around the
country, an act akin to theft in Bapcat's mind. The game warden's
determination to break the scheme ratchets up when it seems his
missing colleague may have authored the idea and employed the help
of an outlaw called Red Hair, who had been raised in the same
orphanage with Bapcat. Red Hair's gang of thugs have long
terrorized the region. Bapcat must use all of his woodcraft to
brave the Trap Hills and Porcupine Mountains to face the criminals
at the old Nonesuch Mine. Zakov the Russian-Bapcat's eccentric game
warden partner-is brought in to help with the hunt, which causes
Bapcat to reevaluate his personal values. In classic Heywood style,
an extraordinary band of Upper Peninsula characters collects around
intrepid woods cops.
A lost classic by beloved novelist Joseph Heywood that helped put
the writer on the map, THE BERKUT begins at dusk as SS Colonel
Gunter Brumm parachutes silently through the sulphuric haze in the
smoldering ruins of Berlin, past the Soviet troops that encircle
the skeleton that the city has become in April 1945. With the
precision and skill that has marked his brilliant military career,
Brumm has completed the first stage of a simple yet seemingly
impossible mission: to evade the Allied forces swarming over Europe
and to smuggle "Herr Wolf," the greatest war criminal of the
twentieth century, to safety. Less than twenty-four hours later a
special Russian team snakes its way into Berlin's city limits,
headed for the Reich Chancellery. It is led by Vasily Petrov, "the
Berkut"-named after the Russian eagles trained to hunt wolves, a
man handpicked by Stalin himself for his ability to track down his
quarry and driven by the knowledge that failure means certain
death. THE BERKUT is a classic story of pursuit, of hunters and the
hunted, that pits two elite teams against each other-both of them
brave, resourceful, of great physical prowess and so fully
motivated that only the winners will survive. Scores of other
characters populate this engrossing thriller: priests, deserters,
partisans, Nazis on the run, Swiss guides, Austrian refugees-as
well as a larger-than-life OSS operative who is the only person
among the hundreds of thousands of Allied troops in Europe who
realizes that Herr Wolf is not only alive but on the verge of
escaping justice. Joseph Heywood's novel is a story of enormous
conviction and urgency, made even more compelling for being based
on facts that have yet to be proven fiction.
The 10th installment of the beloved Woods Cop Mystery series! The
traditional firearm deer season in Michigan lasts two weeks, a time
in which the most hunters are afield during the year and the time
when most things happen. Game wardens cannot count on having any
life but work during this period, and in this case Grady Service,
who takes longtime violator and archrival Limpy Allerdyce on as his
partner for deer season runs into the most bizarre string of big
cases involving deer that he has ever encountered. Buckular
Dystrophy is the term coined by Conservation Officers to describe
the condition whereby people cannot help killing deer, not for
sport or food, but for other reasons - an addiction of sorts, and
unlike other addictions, one not medically organized, but just as
real.
In the seventh installment in the acclaimed Woods Cop Mystery
series, another suspenseful crime noir finds Grady Service, a
detective in the Upper Peninsula for Michigan's Department of
Natural Resources, back in action. The discovery of skeletal
remains sheds troubling light on an eighty-year-old cold case
involving racism, gold, and murder. Combine that with a present-day
ecoterrorist whose guerrilla tactics-including a gruesome trap
called a "wolf tree"-make Rambo look like a cub scout; a thriving
crystal meth industry; and Service's particular brand of grizzled,
sexually tense, and action-packed police work. Death lurks behind
every tree, under every rock, and within every raging river in the
most action-packed Woods Cop Mystery yet.
Every fall in northern Michigan brings a spate of dogman sightings.
A radio DJ's invention, the dogman was created as an
attention-getting joke. But millions of Michiganders believe in
angels and vampires, werewolves, Bigfoot . . . and the dogman. Late
summer, the horribly mutilated bodies of two Native American girls
are found in a tent in a remote campground in the Huron Mountains.
Grady Service, who wants nothing more than to return to patrolling
his beloved Mosquito Wilderness, is called into the case. Strange
animal tracks are found, mayhem ensues, a bloody trail of victims
begins to accumulate, and the governor, in a political panic, and
on her way out of office, orders Grady to hunt down and eliminate
the killer--on her office's dime. Grady Service does not believe in
Easter bunnies, Santa Claus, or dogmen, and the "monster" hunt that
unfolds in Killing a Cold One builds to a violent finish in some of
the Upper Peninsula's harshest and deadliest terrain. Joseph
Heywood's legendary woods cop is called upon to use all of his
investigative skills to sort fantasy from reality in order to do
what the governor wants.
Late spring, 2007. Michigan in economic freefall, state budgets
being slashed, politics reduced to nastiness, state jobs being
erased, and personnel furloughed without pay. Grady Service,
detective for the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) in the
Upper Peninsula, watches as his colleagues leave the department one
by one. Upon being asked by an old friend to look into unspecified
problems his son is facing on the shores of Lake Superior, Service
has no idea how complicated his life is about to become. All he
knows is that the situation involves something his friend calls
"bleeding sand"-and that his new partner, Conservation Officer
Donna "Jingo" Sedge, is the oddest young officer he's ever met. The
story moves at breakneck speed as Service, nearing three decades as
a Woods Cop, finds that expectations seem to be changing on all
fronts, personal and professional, and he is not certain he can
live up to them.
From the author of the Woods Cop Mystery series comes a new
collection of stories about life in the Upper Peninsula. The UP is
often considered its own character in Heywood's tales and now we
have a book dedicated to this supporting character. For all the
times you wanted to know more about the world Heywood's popular
characters came from, like Grady Service, Limpy Allerdyce, and
Luticious Treebone, now is your chance. For Yoopers who are far and
away (and some who are not so far away), one thing is true for them
all: They all want to return above the bridge ASAP. Heywood's
collection of stories shares with his fans why.
We go back in time twenty-five years to meet Service as a young
conservation officer. Still fresh from Vietnam, but on home turf,
Service has been tapped for an unusual assignment that threatens to
be his last. Full of outrageous characters, Running Dark is the
fourth book in the Woods Cop Mystery series and is a wild and is a
riveting ride. For more on Joseph Heywood and the Woods Cop
Mysteries, visit the author's website.
In the sixth title in the successful Woods Cop Mystery series,
another suspenseful who-done-it finds Grady Service with an
unexpectedly complex, truly rotten, and important case on his
hands. This time tainted eggs are showing up in caviar and Service
must expose a ring of corruption in state government and perhaps
within his own beloved DNR, one that could lead him all the way to
the top. Making enemies at every level of the state, Service rousts
out the people on the take. Can he get to the source of the
contaminated eggs and prove it? Pitting corporate greed against the
health of the general public isn't something Service takes lightly.
He doesn't rest until there has been full exposure in a case that
takes him from the wilds of the Upper Peninsula to the jungles of
the state capital, into the maw of the Ukrainian mafia in New York
City and onto distant beaches of Central America. For more on
Joseph Heywood and the Woods Cop Mysteries, visit the author's
website, www.josephheywood.com.
A string of protests by animal-rights activists appear to have
culminated in a double murder at a wolf lab, which releases into
the wild a rare animal: a blue wolf. To the Ojibwa a blue wolf
means luck; but if captured or killed, Armageddon. Grady Service is
in a race against time as an elusive poachers' ring chooses its
final target: the blue wolf. For more on Joseph Heywood and the
Woods Cop Mysteries, visit www.josephheywood.com
A serial killer is knocking off America's best conservation
officers-and Service learns he is next on the list. The FBI brings
him on the case, but Service is also out for blood. The killer has
murdered his girlfriend, Maridly Nantz, and his son, Walter.
Service must navigate the terrain of his own grief as well as the
killer's twisted mind. The fifth book in the Woods Cop Mystery
series. For more on Joseph Heywood and the Woods Cop Mysteries,
visit the author's website.
In the eleventh Woods Cop Mystery, Conservation Officer Grady
Service is on unpaid suspension until spring, but-stubborn as
ever-continues to patrol the Mosquito Wilderness, along with his
complicated past. Service is off-duty through July 4 following a
season in which Service and his unofficial partner (lifelong
poacher Limpy Allerdyce) cleaned up on deer-law violators and
poachers, closing more big cases in two weeks than most officers
solve in their careers. His reward? He is summoned to Lansing, told
he is on unpaid suspension, his badge, firearms, and truck taken.
The rationale for the action is fuzzy, a questioning of his using a
lifelong lawbreaker as partner. For the first time, Service has no
duties and feels like he has been beached unfairly. But voluntarily
on patrol, he begins to sense political shenanigans -an old foe
lurking somewhere in the shadows. He could retire, but decides to
fight, and enlists help from Allerdyce and fellow game warden and
Vietnam Veteran Luticious Treebone. Clues accumulate: It seems
someone wants to illegally commercialize the Mosquito. Grady
realizes if he doesn't stop it, the wilderness will be destroyed.
The tight story unfolds like a poker game, with one side bluffing
and raising, while the other side keeps calling and keeping the
game on until there is a final showdown.
Meet Grady Service: former Marine, now conservation officer, and
the greatest fear of any errant hunter. In Ice Hunter-the first in
the Woods Cop Mystery series set in Michigan's Upper Peninsula and
celebrated for its intricate plots and unforgettable
characters-Service must call upon his every reserve to track,
stalk, and capture the ice hunter.
Strange things are happening to the black bears of the Upper
Peninsula. Grady Service is stumped until a Korean-born professor
is murdered by cyanide-laced figs that contain two freeze-dried
bear gall bladders. Sexy and suspenseful, Chasing a Blond Moon also
introduces a new twist in Grady's personal life: he meets a son he
never knew he had. Once again, Grady Service, the hard-boiled
conservation officer of this superb series set in Michigan's Upper
Peninsula, has a weird case on his hands. Strange things are
happening to the black bear population. Grady Service can't pin the
phenomenon on anyone or anything until a Korean-born professor from
Michigan Tech is murdered by cyanide-laced figs-and two
freeze-dried bear gall bladders are found among the figs. Service
is certain that poachers are at work, killing bears to fuel the
Asian market for traditional medicines. The animal-parts market is
highly organized, and its practitioners are ruthless and dangerous.
Grady's nemesis, Michigan's governor, has cut budgets so severely
that there are not enough conservation officers to cover the state.
Service finds himself filling in for colleagues, chasing illusive
poachers who leave little evidence, and wrestling with the usual
cast of eccentric and entertaining characters. And there is a new
twist in Grady's personal life: he meets a sixteen-year-old son he
never knew he had. Sexy, suspenseful, and full of action, perfect
dialogue, and unforgettable characters, Chasing a Blond Moon
confirms Heywood as one of the finest of his day.
|
|