An elderly woodsman’s will leads to a legal fight over his valuable farmstead in Searle’s mystery novel.
Minnesota newsman Boston Meade interviews Leif Nielsen, a former forest ranger, who represents the last of a dying breed of woodsmen. Leif is determined to protect his farmstead on Tarn Lake, one of the last undeveloped pieces of land in the area. When a bout of pneumonia lands Leif in the hospital, the value of his property attracts the attention of his brother, Harald Nielsen, and Harald’s ambitious wife, Regina. They draft a will for Leif that gives Harald power of attorney. When Leif dies suddenly, the Nielsens are enraged to discover that Leif went behind their backs and left his estate to a professor, Sandy Brewster, who had been like a son to him. The Nielsens plan to contest the will on the grounds that Leif was mentally incompetent, and they intend to fight dirty. Sandy needs the support of allies like Meade if he is to honor Leif’s wishes. But how far are the Nielsens willing to go? The heart of the story is Sandy’s fight for Leif’s legacy—unfortunately, this theme is often overshadowed by the cartoonishly villainous exploits of Harald and Regina. (Regina, especially, increasingly becomes a man-eating cliche as the story progresses, and the time the author spends on the couple seems wasted.) The passages about Leif’s passion for the land contain the book’s most artful prose: “He pecked out descriptions of hanging gardens with a few flowers, grass and ferns clinging to tiny ledges…Each thin stratum of rock read like a page from half a billion years of planetary history.” Sandy’s task in the story is to prevent this beauty from being lost to Harald and Regina’s scheming—the narrative should have followed his example. Still, it takes a skilled writer to make a legal battle over a will a page-turner; Searle deftly fills potentially dry conversations about land preservation with drama and tension.
A legal thriller with some uneven characterizations redeemed by a satisfying conclusion.