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The cover for The Cold Vanish by Jon Billman makes it easy to see why someone could go missing and never be found. I’d like to thank NetGalley and Grand Central Publishing for the opportunity to read and review The Cold Vanish.
Amazon / Audiobook / Goodreads
MY REVIEW
I saw the title and cover, then read the blurb, and my interest was peaked. I had to know what Jon Billman had to say in this true story of the missing across the country.
To tell the story, Jon Billman did walk in Jacob Gray’s footsteps, to a point.
The Schrödinger’s cat experiment…I had never heard the entire experiment, but the fact that it is neither, dead or alive, or both, dead and alive, until you open the box. I imagine it is the same with a missing person. I cannot imagine how the not knowing could mess with someone’s mind.
I do believe some of the problem is with those who are doing the investigating. The process has come a long way, but I think investigators can still get stuck on one person, zeroing in on them, making the suspect fit the evidence. Not only has technology aided the investigators, the investigators have become more sophisticated.
Unfortunately, there are still those who are out to make a name for themselves, to get elected to office. or just inept and unqualified for the job at hand. And the wilderness…such a large area where bodies could be easily hidden, make findng them like a needle in a haystack.
Cold Vanish…here one minute, gone the next. Aliens? Bigfoot? The Supernatural?
The book was written like a TV episode, hopping from one case to another, coming back again and again. It was confusing at times, but I do like that so many missings were shared.
I voluntarily reviewed a free copy of The Cold Vanish by Jon Billman.
GOODREADS BLURB
For readers of Jon Krakauer and Douglas Preston, the critically acclaimed author and journalist Jon Billman’s fascinating, in-depth look at people who vanish in the wilderness without a trace and those eccentric, determined characters who try to find them.
These are the stories that defy
conventional logic. The proverbial vanished without a trace incidences,
which happen a lot more (and a lot closer to your backyard) than almost
anyone thinks. These are the missing whose situations are the hardest on
loved ones left behind. The cases that are an embarrassment for park
superintendents, rangers and law enforcement charged with Search &
Rescue. The ones that baffle the volunteers who comb the mountains,
woods and badlands. The stories that should give you pause every time
you venture outdoors.
Through Jacob Gray’s disappearance in Olympic
National Park, and his father Randy Gray who left his life to search for
him, we will learn about what happens when someone goes missing.
Braided around the core will be the stories of the characters who fill
the vacuum created by a vanished human being. We’ll meet eccentric
bloodhound-handler Duff and R.C., his flagship purebred, who began
trailing with the family dog after his brother vanished in the San
Gabriel Mountains. And there’s Michael Neiger North America’s foremost
backcountry Search & Rescue expert and self-described “bushman”
obsessed with missing persons. And top researcher of persons missing on
public wildlands Ex-San Jose, California detective David Paulides who is
also one of the world’s foremost Bigfoot researchers.
It’s a tricky thing to write about missing persons because the story is the absence of someone. A void. The person at the heart of the story is thinner than a smoke ring, invisible as someone else’s memory. The bones you dig up are most often metaphorical. While much of the book will embrace memory and faulty memory — history — The Cold Vanish is at its core a story of now and tomorrow. Someone will vanish in the wild tomorrow. These are the people who will go looking.
ABOUT JON BILLMAN (from Grand Central Publishing)
Jon Billman is a former wildland firefighter and high school teacher. He holds an MFA in Fiction from Eastern Washington University. He’s the author of the story collection When We Were Wolves (Random House, 1999). Billman is a regular contributor to Outside and his fiction and nonfiction have appeared in Esquire, The Paris Review, and Zoetrope: All-Story. He teaches fiction and journalism at Northern Michigan University in the Upper Peninsula, where he lives with his family in a log cabin along the Chocolay River.
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