From the Back Cover:
"Bad Medicine is an engrossing, vividly told tale of the clash of cultures in modern New Mexico. I enjoyed it very much."--Larry McMurtry
"Ron Querry is a man who sees clearly and deeply into the landscape. Bad Medicine is first of all a good story well told. But beyond that is an evocation of the Navajo world, one in which the canyons and cliffs and clouds are sharply defined and all the sounds of the ancient earth ring true."--N. Scott Momaday"Ron Querry's Bad Medicine is even better than his earlier novel, The Death of Bernadette Lefthand. Mr. Querry, for my money, is the best novelist we have of Native American tales. You should spend yours to get acquainted with Querry's plots, characters, and talents."--Larry L. King
From Kirkus Reviews:
Steadily entertaining second novel (after The Death of Bernadette Lefthand, not reviewed), about Western versus Navajo and Hopi medicine in the Southwest. The Navajo Reservation in northeastern Arizona near Four Corners is stricken by an unfamiliar, devastatingly swift disease that starts with a headache and kills in less than 48 hours. Can it be the result of archaeologists Sabine Vogel and Peter Campbell's unearthing of a virus in sacred Navajo land? Is it the revenge of ghosts for the theft by Silas Slowtalker of a sacred treasure at the nearby Hopi Reservation's Bear Clan, a tablet given in turn to Peter Campbell, who later took it to the Little Springs Trading Post to validate its rarity? Slowtalker's vile deed also unearthed corpse powder, which fills the very air with bad medicine. Investigating is young Dr. Push Foster, of the Indian Health Services Hospital in Hashk, Navajo Nation, himself a mixed-blood Choctaw, who teams up with old buddy Dr. Sonny Brokeshoulder to check into the histories of the dead, who are all Navajo. Push eventually gets an analysis from Atlanta's Centers for Disease Control suggesting that the illness appears to be caused by a hantavirus carried by rodents, mainly mice. When he confers with terrifically wise old Navajo Clifford Lomaquaptewa about Atlanta's report, Clifford says, ``I don't know. . . That sounds pretty superstitious, to me . . . blamin' it on mice and some germs you can't see.'' And, in fact, the CDC's research helps unravel only a part of the puzzle; also active, it would seem, is a skinwalker, a coyote who can shape-shift to human form and is a being of concentrated evil. After some tense showdowns, the villains get their comeuppances, but the line between Western and Indian medicine remains very vague. Great Indian lore in an ingenious medical gripper without the whole globe held in terror. -- Copyright ©1998, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
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