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Leave No Trace

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0 of 2 copies available
FBI handler Meg Jennings and her search-and-rescue K-9 partner are heading south where it's hunting season. But this time the prey is human.

"For dog lovers and action fans. Dogs-in-action junkies will be transported."
Kirkus Reviews

"Fascinating...Fans will look forward to Meg's further adventures."
Publishers Weekly

One arrow through the heart could be a tragic hunting accident. A second one, within days, looks more like a crime. That's when Meg Jennings and Brian Foster of the FBI's Forensic Canine Unit head to Georgia to investigate. With their dogs Hawk and Lacey, Meg and Brian are enlisted to follow the scent of a killer. At first, nothing seems to connect the two victims–a county commissioner and State Patrol officer. But the blood sport around the southern town of Blue Ridge is just beginning.

As the body count rises, the compound bow killer becomes even more elusive, appearing and vanishing like a ghost. However, with each new slaying Meg is beginning to suspect the grim design that's escalating in the shadows. At its heart, a tragic event that reaches back nearly two centuries in Georgia's history is now turning Blue Ridge into a hunting ground. But as Meg gets closer to solving the puzzle, the closer she is to stepping into the crosshairs of an elusive murderer with deadly aim, and motives as deep and dark as the woods . . .
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 12, 2020
      Driscoll’s enjoyable fifth FBI K-9 novel (after 2019’s No Man’s Land) takes FBI Human Scent Team agent Meg Jennings and her canine partner, Hawk, along with colleague Brian Foster and his dog, to a murder scene in a forested area of Georgia, where a sergeant in the Georgia State Patrol has been fatally shot by a three-foot-long hunting arrow. After the dogs are put on the scent, Meg and Brian follow them along a perilous path, proof of the killer’s daring and agility. Other people are later killed in a similar fashion. The suspense builds as the investigators try to figure out what connects the deaths before another victim turns up. Despite some red herrings, readers will have little trouble figuring out the guilty party. Driscoll offers a fascinating look at the training of working dogs, who are depicted as uniformly brave and obedient. The romance between Meg and her unbelievably patient boyfriend, firefighter Tom Webb, adds some depth. Fans will look forward to Meg’s further adventures. Agent: Nicole Resciniti, Seymour Agency.

    • Library Journal

      January 8, 2021

      Driscoll's fifth entry in her "FBI K-9" series (following No Man's Land) begins with Meg Jennings and her black lab Hawk and their partners Brian and his German shepherd Lacey on their way to Georgia to track a killer. Someone has been killing people in the rural northwest part of the state with a bow and arrow and then disappearing into the trees. After a fruitless search, the team relocates to the area from their Washington, DC, base to get an earlier start if there is another murder. Working with the local FBI agent in charge and a reporter, the investigators link the killings to a proposed new TVA dam that will flood a local valley and displace its residents. An additional complication is that the descendants of Cherokee who were driven from the area in the 19th century are planning a suit to reclaim their ancestral lands. A growing list of suspects and a quickening pace of killings make this a tense and fast-paced investigation for both the human and canine investigators. VERDICT Fans of the series and fans of dog-focused mysteries will enjoy this outing with plenty of details of the workings of search dog teams as well as lots of local and historical color.--Dan Forrest, Western Kentucky Univ. Libs., Bowling Green

      Copyright 2021 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      October 15, 2020
      A fifth outing pits search-and-rescue officer Meg Jennings and her canine partner against a serial killer whose choice of weapons drives the story. The shooting of Sgt. Noah Hubbert, of the Georgia State Patrol, would be shocking under any circumstances. What sets it apart is the fact that he's been shot with an arrow--and that he's not the first such victim in the area. Tim Reynolds, the chairman of the Fannin County Board of Commissioners, was struck down by an identical arrow two weeks ago. The killer's modus operandi should make him absurdly easy to track down: How many archers can reliably hit their targets from as far away as this one clearly was? And the most likely motive is pretty clear too: opposition to the Copperhill Dam, which has been planned to manage the water level of the Toccoa River, which separates McCaysville, Georgia, from Copperhill, Tennessee. But that doesn't deprive Driscoll of the opportunity for several gripping sequences involving the tracking of the suspect by members of the Human Scent Evidence Team and their canine partners. These action sequences, juiced by the heroine's fear of heights, are terrific, and the interplay between the dogs and their handlers is deeply felt. But neither the plotting nor the characterization measures up to them. Meg's friend Clay McCord, of the Washington Post, generates a list of award-winning archers, and then Meg and Special Agent Sam Torres, of the Atlanta FBI, go down the list, trying to ignore the mounting body count, till a profiler points them to the only suspect who's come close to making an impression. Strictly for dog lovers and action fans. Dogs-in-action junkies will be transported.

      COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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