Praise for Too Deep to Cross:
“With eloquent prose and vivid details, Kerri Hakoda weaves a multilayered tale of mystery that spans decades and family generations. Too Deep to Cross immerses the reader in the Alaskan bush and its diverse cultures through powerfully drawn characters and plot. Outstanding!”
—Margaret Mizushima, author of the award-winning Timber Creek K-9 Mysteries, including Dying Cry
“Small town secrets burrow deep. When they span generations, they become deadly. Too Deep to Cross is gripping, and will keep you turning pages well into the night. When a link to the past surfaces, everyone’s a suspect in this relentless thriller.”
—James L’Etoile, award-winning author of Illusion of Truth and the Detective Nathan Parker series.
“Family secrets rise from the icy depths of Galena, Alaska, in Kerri Hakoda’s Edgar Award-nominated series featuring DeHavilland Beans . . . With scenes from 2007 Galena, the World War II detention center of Minidoka in Idaho, and contemporary Silicon Valley, Hakoda expertly immerses her readers into worlds rarely depicted in literature. A most necessary story wrapped in a mystery that will keep you turning the pages.”
—Naomi Hirahara, writer of the Mary Higgins Clark Award-winning Japantown Mystery series
“From a handgun in a piano to a sabotaged floatplane, Kerri Hakoda employs quirky images and fiercely vivid incidents to immerse the reader in the sometimes-violent Alaskan bush lifestyle. Too Deep to Cross moves like an angry grizzly thundering across the tundra.”
—Richard Chiappone, author of The Murder of Crows
“Too Deep To Cross is a smart and fun mystery that begins with a long-lost prosthetic leg, but soon becomes a multi-layered, multigenerational story about the bonds of community, the weight of history, and the kind of secrets that upend lives and ripple through time. With her trademark wit and surprising twists, Kerri Hakoda brilliantly captures the colorful isolation of this remote Alaskan town, as well as the long shadows of Japanese internment. I didn’t want this lovely book to end!”
—Matthew Sullivan, author of Midnight at the Bright Ideas Bookstore and Midnight in Soap Lake
“Hakoda skillfully weaves an intricate web of family secrets and well-hidden local crimes in this gripping Alaskan mystery.”
—Pamela Beason, The Sam Westin Mysteries
Praise for Cold to the Touch:
2025 EDGAR BEST FIRST NOVEL AWARD NOMINEE!
“[An] excellent, fast-paced police procedural . . . For fans of Harlan Coben or Lissa Marie Redmond.”
—Library Journal, starred review
“[An] immersive debut . . . A memorable leading man . . . [And] a diverse, fascinating landscape readers will want to get lost in.”
—Publishers Weekly
“An excellent debut novel—a very well written police procedural with some dark and chilling undertones in the atmospheric Alaskan winter.”
—Mystery & Suspense Magazine