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Death In Hilo

Coming Soon March 2024

Publishers Weekly
Publishers Weekly
Redman juggles the plotlines nimbly, creating palpable stakes for Wong . . . Fans of Naomi Hirahara’s Leilani Santiago Hawai‘i Mysteries should give this a spin.
James Kestrel
Edgar Award winning author of Five Decembers
Redman does an excellent job portraying Hawaiʻi in a clear-eyed way that most writers don’t.
Charles Ardai
Charles Ardai
Award-winning author of Gun Honey
Another irresistible investigation into the dark heart of Hawai‘i. From the first page you’re drawn into the web, and when Redman tightens his grip, escape is impossible.
Frankie Bow
Frankie Bow
Author of The Musubi Murder
A fast-paced mystery with a rich sense of place . . . Kawika Wong is a complex and flawed character, who seeks justice . . . A great read!
D. M. RowellAuthor of Never Name the Dead
Redman’s second installment of the riveting Kawika Wong series exposes the seedy side of paradise with its culture clashes and social class divides . . . A timely and fascinating story—a thinking person's mystery!
Jane Lasswell-Hoff
Jane Lasswell-HoffAuthor of Bones of Paradise, A Big Island Mystery and The Trees of Banyan Drive
An intricately plotted follow-up to Redman's first mystery.
Frederick Allen
Author of Reckoning with Race
Marvelously entertaining and passionate, yet fascinating and educational at the same time.
Scott Blackburn
Scott Blackburn
Author of It Dies with You
With deeply-drawn characters and a setting as beautiful as it is mysterious . . . This is the sequel that fans of Bones of Hilo deserve.
Kawika Branch
Redman’s weaving of the narrative was as intricate as a lauhala mat, developing characters and spinning stunning surprises that hold you until the very end and leave you wanting more.
International Thriller Writers finalist Eric Redman is back in this thrilling second installment of his Hawaiian murder mystery series, perfect for fans of Anne Hillerman. When bodies start piling up and the list of suspects grows long, Detective Kawika Wong must dig into his own past to solve a Big Island murder.

It’s been twelve long years since Detective Kawika Wong was tasked with solving the brutal murder of the infamous real-estate developer Ralph Fortunato—a case that led to more bodies than answers and a slew of complicated and ancient secrets, a case that made his career. Now, the once rookie detective is next in line to be Honolulu’s chief of police. But all is not well on O‘ahu or the Big Island.


For weeks, Kawika and his team have failed to catch an elusive serial killer known as the “Slasher.” He strikes quickly and efficiently, and he doesn’t make mistakes. But when a freshly decapitated body is found at a previous dump site, Kawika’s gut tells him something isn’t quite right. Who is this victim, and why does Kawika feel that this one doesn’t belong to the Slasher?


To make matters worse, a hungry young journalist, Zoë Akona, is investigating the questionable outcome Kawika and his then-superior Terry Tanaka produced in the Fortunato case, and her snooping leads to an official review that jeopardizes everything Kawika’s worked so hard for.


But Detective Wong knows that no matter what, he must find a second murderer even while the “Slasher” continues to strike. The investigation takes him back to the Big Island—and to the long dormant case Zoë won’t leave alone. Kawika is about to discover what happens when the secrets of the past catch up with the promises of his future.

"Conscientious cops juggle a double handful of brutal cases in paradise."

Redman’s meticulous, panoramic crime story introduces several intriguing plot threads even before getting to the main event. Eager Honolulu Star-Advertiser novice reporter Zoë Akona visits inmate Michael Cushing days before his scheduled release from a Washington prison after he’s served a long sentence for the Fortunato murder (from Bones of Hilo, 2021), which Cushing calls “the most famous homicide in Hawai‘i.” He brashly asserts his innocence, unspooling a complicated plot that Zoë is later pressed to investigate by the paper’s senior crime reporter, Bernard Scully. Meanwhile, a corpse without hands or a head found in Honolulu’s Kapi‘olani Park becomes the first case for recent police academy graduate Yvonne Ivanovna under the direction of chief homicide detective Kawika Wong. Many presume this is another victim of the Slasher, a serial killer who’s still at large, but the two detectives assigned to that case, both named Jerry, are dubious. When the director of Hawaiian relations for the controversial Thirty Meter Telescope Project on Mauna Kea goes missing, a trio of detectives undertakes the investigation, which has political implications. The activist group Warriors for Mauna Kea virulently opposes the project. Redman, who writes with quiet authority, places Kawika at the novel’s center, returning to him regularly as the lens through which the different cases are viewed. The novel proceeds in a measured, detail-oriented way, beginning with multiple maps and “A Note on Hawaiian Language.” Almost every chapter introduces a new character until a densely textured world of lawbreakers and law enforcers emerges.

"A procedural deep dive, long on facts and forensics, short on flash."

— Kirkus Reviews

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About ME

Eric (Ric) Redman is a Seattle-based writer, lawyer, and climate activist. He is a former contributing editor of Rolling Stone and has written for the New York Times, Washington Post, and many other publications. He also wrote the non-fiction bestseller The Dance of Legislation.

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International Thriller Writers finalist Eric Redman is back in this thrilling second installment of his Hawaiian murder mystery series, perfect for fans of Anne Hillerman. When bodies start piling up and the list of suspects grows long, Detective Kawika Wong must dig into his own past to solve a Big Island murder..

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