With the help of a demented Alaska Native elder, Chukchi police chief Nathan Active hunts for the killer who left a woman's expertly dismembered body in the ice cellar of an abandoned Inupiat Eskimo fish camp. The investigation pulls Active into a dark tangle of love and jealousy, even as he struggles to recover from the PTSD that has haunted him since being wounded in a shootout in an earlier case. The case starts when Tommie Leokuk's husband brings her to Active's office to show him what she found in her latest midnight ramble around the Arctic hamlet of Chukchi. From the pouch of her traditional atiqluk, she pulls a human jawbone with a single molar still in place. Tommie's dementia means she can't explain where she found it. As her husband explains, "She lost her brain few years ago." At first, Chief Active doesn't know whether she's found a murder victim or an old grave opened by erosion or scavengers. He soon discovers it's very much a murder case, one of the most tangled he's seen.
The victim had two lovers, one male, one female. Both become suspects as the investigation proceeds. At the same time, Active grapples with PTSD from being shot in a prior case. When he starts to wonder how his gun would taste, he realizes it's time to see Chukchi's tribal healer, Nelda Qivits, who believes anything can be cured by a cup of bitter sourdock tea in her little cabin on a back street of Chukchi. ______________________ Ghost Light is the seventh installment in the critically acclaimed Nathan Active series: "Painterly descriptions of Alaska's natural beauty and the lives of the native people are fascinating." - USA Today "An enchanting series" - People "You can feel the bite of the west wind that comes screaming across the Alaska tundra and sense the isolation of the Inupiat Eskimos who live in this desolate part of the world." - New York Times Review of Books.