Sisters of the Midnight Sun: A Murder in Arctic Alaska

When the sun rises in the Arctic after having been gone for months, the effect is one of time blindness and disorientation. In Rebecca Wright Stevens's gripping legal thriller-memoir, Sisters of the Midnight Sun, this unwavering beauty became the staging ground for a crime as chilling as the permafrost. The bodies of two well-known sisters, Bernice and Wanda Ipalook, were discovered outside of Utqiagvik (formerly known as Barrow, Alaska), leading to more than a forensic puzzle for those drawn into the investigation.

The account follows Stevens's time as a tenacious defense attorney assigned to Amos Lane, who already had pending assault and theft charges. What began as a straightforward criminal case spiraled into a complex web of politics and historical trauma. Stevens skillfully sets the scene, detailing the claustrophobia of a town where everyone is a witness and no one is a stranger. Perhaps the most compelling attribute of Sisters of the Midnight Sun is Stevens's transparency regarding her relationship with the Arctic and its community. She mourned her limitations as a legal practitioner, even as her bonds with the people there deepened.

Sisters of the Midnight Sun is for readers who grew up on the razor-sharp courtroom dramas of Scott Turow or the high-stakes atmospheric tension of John Grisham, delivering an extra bite that feels like a bracing breath of sub-zero air. It provides the satisfaction of a legal thriller while serving as an insightful investigation into a territory those in the Lower 48 rarely see clearly. This is a haunting, expertly crafted reminder that the law is only as strong as the people who uphold it. --Elizabeth DeNoma, executive editor, DeNoma Literary Services, Seattle, Wash.

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