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Bad Little Falls
Bad Little Falls (2012)
Bad Little Falls finds Maine game warden Mike Bowditch in professional exile, transferred to a remote outpost near the Canadian border after the fallout of earlier events. In the middle of a blizzard, he is called to the cabin of an elderly couple after a half-frozen man appears at their door, raving that his friend is lost in the storm. What begins as an emergency search in brutal winter conditions quickly turns into a murder investigation, pulling Mike into a case far darker and more complicated than it first appears.
The premise plays to one of Paul Doiron’s biggest strengths: using the Maine wilderness as more than scenery. The snowstorm, isolation, and hard country around Mike become part of the pressure of the story, giving the investigation a raw, exposed quality that fits the series well. Bad Little Falls continues to build Mike as a stubborn, often embattled warden whose work keeps drawing him into crimes far beyond routine game-law enforcement. It reads as both a winter murder mystery and a character-driven suspense novel, with tension coming from the landscape, the secrets of a small community, and Mike’s refusal to back away once the truth starts to emerge.
