Reviews

Dakota by Gwen Florio

ndbeyer's review against another edition

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4.0

Lola finds trouble again

Again easy read. Twists and turns keep you interested although I was able to predict the bad people. References to the oil patch come across a bit more crass than they would from somewhere who lives here

ndbeyer's review against another edition

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4.0

Lola finds trouble again

Again easy read. Twists and turns keep you interested although I was able to predict the bad people. References to the oil patch come across a bit more crass than they would from somewhere who lives here

gretlulu's review against another edition

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4.0

It is a novel but it does it in some of the intricacies of life in Native communities intersecting with the White world. Also the rampant rape and abuse present in the Bakken.

monicajosephine's review against another edition

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3.0

There are some things I really like about these books, but overall, I think they're a little too dark and dour for me. I won't be reading anymore of them.

kristenhg's review

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4.0

Had me hanging on right up to the last page.

jessies's review

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3.0

I'm honestly giving this three stars instead of two because the subject matter was interesting, even if the story was predictable.

Lola Wicks is a big city reporter now living in rural Montana, covering the local Indian Reservation for the town's newspaper. After a missing girl is found dead outside of town, Lola discovers that the dead girl, along with other young girls missing from the Reservation, may have been working as prostitutes in the Dakota oil fields.

The oil book towns of the Dakotas have interested me for a while. Small dying towns suddenly became over crowded with workers from nearby oil fields. In these towns men would likely out number women 100 to 1. These areas are prime areas for sex trafficking.

Florio is a journalist herself and discusses the facts of these areas in an interesting way; however, her character's and plot fall short. Generally I do not like mysteries with journalist protagonists. It seems like they always need to be rescued and Lola is no exception. She takes stupid risks to find the truth, most of which had me groaning.

The general plot was very thin. We never learn much about the murdered girls or the girls who have gone missing, just that they all had problems with drugs. I would have been much more engaged in the story if I had some kind of emotional attachment to the victims.

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