When a swami reveals that the Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh has been reincarnated as a 26-year-old barista in a coffee shop in Northeast Portland, detective Neil Ferguson suspects there will be trouble. In the 1980s the original Bhagwan brought thousands of red-robed followers to Oregon, preaching enlightenment and free love. They built a utopian city in Eastern Oregon's desert -- and then poisoned hundreds of people in an attempt to overthrow the government. Now the Rajneeshees are back, building a new commune on an Indian reservation near Crater Lake. When people begin falling victim to a mysterious sniper, Ferguson has to find out the truth behind the Rajneesh revival -- and rescue his niece Harmony. The author of five novels and a dozen nonfiction books, Sullivan completed his B.A. degree in English at Cornell University under Alison Lurie, studied linguistics at Germany's Heidelberg University, and earned an M.A. in German at the University of Oregon. In 1985 Sullivan backpacked more than a thousand miles across Oregon's wilderness. His journal of that adventure, Listening for Coyote, has been chosen one of Oregon's 100 Books, the most significant books in the state's history. In summer he writes at the log cabin that he and his wife Janell Sorensen built by hand in the wilds of Oregon's Coast Range. His memoir Cabin Fever tells the story of building that retreat, far from roads and phones. The rest of the year he and his wife live in Eugene, Oregon, where he volunteers to promote libraries and literature.