The Tzer Island book blog features book reviews written by TChris, the blog's founder.  I hope the blog will help readers discover good books and avoid bad books.  I am a reader, not a book publicist.  This blog does not exist to promote particular books, authors, or publishers.  I therefore do not participate in "virtual book tours" or conduct author interviews.  You will find no contests or giveaways here.

The blog's nonexclusive focus is on literary/mainstream fiction, thriller/crime/spy novels, and science fiction.  While the reviews cover books old and new, in and out of print, the blog does try to direct attention to books that have been recently published.  Reviews of new (or newly reprinted) books generally appear every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.  Reviews of older books appear on occasional weekends.  Readers are invited and encouraged to comment.  See About Tzer Island for more information about this blog, its categorization of reviews, and its rating system.

Entries in Travis Mulhauser (2)

Thursday
Apr232026

Fair Chase by Travis Mulhauser

Published by Grand Central Publishing on April 28, 2026

I’m always happy to find a thriller that doesn’t depend on tough guys saving the world by clobbering bad guys. It’s not that I don’t enjoy tough guy heroics, but is that the only way to write a thriller? Travis Mulhauser proves that crime stories can be exciting without introducing protagonists whose fists or guns dominate the narrative.

Fair Chase takes place in the fictional Cutler County, Michigan. A resort economy sustains the county residents, some of whom claim to have seen a gray wolf. Local businessmen and government officials insist that they saw a large coyote.

Residents worry that a wolf will eat their pets or scare away vacationers. Some are panicking because they fear a wolf that settles into the local environment will attract more wolves. Of greater concern to resort owners is the risk that resort construction will be halted by environmental studies if endangered wolves suddenly appear.

A few rowdy residents vow to take up arms and illegally hunt the wolf. They are the typical tough-talking blowhards who could stand ten feet from a wolf in the woods and never spot it. A shady guy named Davenport, however, hires Darnette Lewis to kill the wolf. Darnette is a young man fresh out of prison who needs cash. He has few skills beyond the ability to track and kill animals. Davenport promises to give Darnette a healthy payment, assuming he can dispose of the wolf’s body before anyone can prove that a wolf has entered the county.

The Sawbrook family owns forested land between the Crow River and Lake Michigan. Lucy Sawbrook is part of that family. She’s also a game warden who understands the importance of protecting the wolf. She knows that if wolves take up residence in the county, locals will rarely see them and will eventually learn to coexist, just as they live with bears and bobcats. Lucy understands that people freak out when their fears are stoked, but know they will eventually “get bored and need something new to worry over when this doesn’t pan out to be the end of the world.”

This branch of the Sawbrook family — consisting of Lucy, her sister Jewell, her brother Buckner and his wife Sky — is less villainous than the family’s reputation would suggest. When a young man named Delos Harris shows up claiming to be a Sawbrook, they quickly recognize him as one of their own.

Delos served some time in a juvenile prison and was most recently living with a foster family, but when his foster father threatened to hunt for the wolf, Delos stole the man’s rifle and fled. Delos feels a kinship with the wolf and wants to protect it. His need to protect the wolf is one reason the Sawbrooks accept him as one of their own.

The story turns into the chase that the title implies — Darnette, Delos, and the Sawbrooks all chase the wolf, with its fate to be decided by whichever person reaches it first. Fair Chase is also the story of a family sticking together to protect the things they value — their land, their independence, and a wolf. Perhaps the wolf symbolizes the Sawbrook family. The Sawbrooks deliberately live apart from human society and, like the wolf, are seen as a threat by many members of the larger community.

Buckner makes the interesting point that society’s view of wolves is dictated by emotion rather than reason. Nobody cares if a wolf kills a barn cat, “but kill one of Mrs. Jennings’s cats and it’d be a five-alarm fire. It’s just like with humans. Certain kinds you can get away with doing whatever you want to them, other kinds you can’t so much as look at them sideways.” Delos is the kind of kid society might throw away, the kind who can be victimized while people with power turn their heads. He’s a sympathetic character because he has greater respect for wolves than he has for selfish landowners who believe their profits are more important than an endangered species.

The story moves forcefully to a poweful conclusion. Travis Mulhauser’s occasional forays into philosophy give the novel a bit of intellectual heft, but the book is a standout because of its authentic characters. Their fidelity to family and to nature imbues them with a kind of honor. The real predators in the story are not wolves but greedy resort owners.The Sawbrooks and Delos earn the reader’s respect by bending the law to protect a wolf, a more noble purpose for bending the law than protecting profits.

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Wednesday
Mar122025

The Trouble Up North by Travis Mulhauser

Published by Grand Central Publishing on March 11, 2025

The Sawbrook family owns six hundred acres adjacent to Crooked Tree Park in Northern Michigan, but developers want their land. The Sawbrooks live on the edge of society and constantly fight with each other, but they aren’t dysfunctional. Within their limits, they function surprisingly well. The Sawbrooks are a crime family, but the crimes are low-key — brewing moonshine, smuggling cigarettes into Canada — and the Sawbrooks take pride in never being caught. Although they spend much of their time on the river, they are equally proud that no Sawbrook ever died by drowning.

Rhoda’s grandfather was “not well after the war,” a diagnosis that explains his decision to plant land mines in the woods to kill as many invaders as possible when they came for him. Rhoda’s father placed barbed wire around the mined land, although an occasional black bear tears down the fence and explodes while trying to snack on berries.

Rhoda’s husband is living with lung cancer. He would like to die but Rhoda can’t bear the thought of living without him. Their daughter Lucy is a park ranger. She's the only Sawbrook with an education and the only one who has any interest in obeying the law.

Rhoda gave equal parcels of the family land to her three children. Lucy sold her share to an environmental trust for $20,000 to keep it from being developed, causing Rhoda to complain that she gave it to communists — i.e., the conservation group that purchased the land.

Lucy paid her sister Jewell $20,000 so she could sell Jewell’s share of the land to the trust, but Jewell promptly lost the cash in a high-stakes poker game in Vegas, thwarting her hope of doubling her money and buying the land back. Lucy spent half the cash she received from the trust on treatment for her alcoholic brother Buckner. She regards that investment as a waste when Buckner goes off the wagon after hearing bad news about his stripper girlfriend.

Against that background, a story unfolds, although the plot is an excuse to explore the family dynamic. A man named Van Hargrave offers Jewell $10,000 (but only $1,000 up front) to set his boat on fire. Hargrave says he wants to collect the insurance. Hargrave runs poker games in his garage and promises to set up a game with high rollers that will allow Jewell to win more money than she lost in Vegas.

Jewell manages to burn the boat but the fire spreads to the forest. As Lucy evacuates campers from the park, she spots Jewell running through the woods and gives chase. They both end up in the river, creating the risk that one of them will be the first Sawbrook to drown — or to be captured after a crime. Buckner enters the mix by getting drunk and stealing an ATV from the park rangers. Lucy spots him as she’s chasing Jewell.

The Trouble Up North blends a crime story with a family drama. At the end, it becomes a story of enduring love. Travis Mulhauser crafts a fast-moving plot that will capture the reader’s attention, but characterization is the novel’s strength.

Buckner is a veteran but he doesn't blame war for his alcoholism. “Buckner had always been a drinker but it really picked up after he got back from Iraq, which people liked to say was because of trauma. Buckner had not been traumatized, but after a while he stopped arguing and just let people believe what they wanted.”

Buckner’s girlfriend has more depth than most fictional strippers. Her relationship with Rhoda showcases two capable women with soft hearts and hard attitudes. They aren’t afraid of bullies.

Lucy and Jewell are at odds through much of the novel. Lucy’s job is to enforce the law (at least within the park). Will Lucy notify the authorities that her sister started the fire? Someone may have died in the fire, so Lucy worries about her own criminal liability if she protects Jewell. Yet protecting each other is the drive that holds the Sawbrook clan together. How the mess the family members have made of their lives will be resolved is the question that gives the story its tension.

The story is tight. Like Chekov’s Gun, seemingly insignificant details become important later in the narrative. The resolution, like the story that precedes it, is smart and surprising. The Trouble Up North is an easy novel to recommend to fans of literary crime fiction.

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