
Published by Viking on May 12, 2015
A dispute over ownership rights to the bones of a T-Rex is complicated  by the death of the landowner who accepted money from the High Plains  Dinosaur Museum for the right to dig them up. The mess gets messier when  the FBI intervenes, claiming that the bones are on public land and  therefore belong to the United States government. The Cheyenne are also  asserting a claim to the dinosaur remains. Walt Longmire would like the  whole mess to go away but first he needs to solve the suspicious death  of the landowner, which leads to a murder mystery with a half dozen  suspects for the reader (and Walt, together with series regulars Lucian  and Henry) to ponder.
Longmire is still having visions which, in  the hands of most other writers, I would consider a cheesy gimmick, but  the visions play only a minor role and they suit the offbeat stories  that Craig Johnson tells. Longmire novels are always fun and this one is  no exception. Walt's laconic wit and Craig Johnson's breezy style make  the novels a joy to read. But, fun as it is, this Longmire novel is more  moving than most. There is often family drama in a Longmire novel but  Dry Bones introduces a family crisis that is sure to form the central  plot in one of the upcoming novels. As always, I look forward to reading  it.
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