Scott Graham is the National Outdoor Book Award-winning author of the National Park Mystery Series. Graham is an avid outdoorsman and public lands advocate who lives in southwest Colorado. In addition to his mysteries, he is the author of five nonfiction books. He has worked as a reporter, editor, disk jockey, city councilor, and coal-shoveling fireman on the steam-powered Durango-Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad. Learn more at scottfranklingraham.com.
SunLit: Tell us this bookโs backstory โ whatโs it about and what inspired you to write it?
Scott Graham: โDeath Valley Duelโ features a deadly ultra-trail running race across the Mojave Desert between the top ultra runners in the world, including teenage phenom Carmelita Ortega. Carm is the stepdaughter of archaeologist Chuck Bender, protagonist of my National Park Mystery Series, who is serving on Carmโs support crew for the race with the rest of the Bender-Ortega clan.
Mixed in with the fictional story of the 150-mile ultra race is the true historical tale of the California Water Wars, which led to the death of Owens Lake a century ago and the resultant toxic dust storms that rise off the dry lakebed to this dayโa harbinger of what may soon be to come for the disappearing Great Salt Lake and the citizens of Salt Lake City.
UNDERWRITTEN BY

Each week, The Colorado Sun and Colorado Humanities & Center For The Book feature an excerpt from a Colorado book and an interview with the author. Explore the SunLit archives at coloradosun.com/sunlit.
SunLit: Place the excerpt you selected in context. How does it fit into the book as a whole and why did you select it?
Graham: In the excerpt, competitors in the Whitney to Death 150 leave the initial aid station of the race and set off across the dry bed of former Owens Lake. The collapse of one of the racers on the lakebed is the second potentially nefarious incident of the competition, pointing toward the likelihood of more villainy to come.
SunLit: What influences and/or experiences informed the project before you sat down to write?
Graham: When I served on the support crew for my son during the Run Rabbit Run 100-mile ultra trail race in Steamboat Springs, I watched racers stumble into an aid station at three in the morning, having been pummeled by snow, sleet, and hail throughout the night. They were dazed and exhaustedโperfect prey, I realized, for a murderer. With that, the idea for โDeath Valley Duelโ was born.
SunLit: What did the process of writing this book add to your knowledge and understanding of your craft and/or the subject matter?
Graham: My research for โDeath Valley Duelโ included climbing Mt. Whitney, at 14,505 feet the highest point in the Lower 48, and hiking across Badwater Basin in Death Valley National Park, at 282 feet below sea level the lowest point in North America.
“Death Valley Duel”
Where to find it:
- Prospector: Search the combined catalogs of 23 Colorado libraries
- Libby: E-books and audio books
- NewPages Guide: List of Colorado independent bookstores
- Bookshop.org: Searchable database of bookstores nationwide

SunLit present new excerpts from some of the best Colorado authors that not only spin engaging narratives but also illuminate who we are as a community. Read more.
My hope is that, in experiencing those highs and lows, I am able to share with readers a true-life feel for the extremes of the Mojave Desert and surrounding mountains, and the brutally harsh conditions that make Death Valley National Park such a great setting for a murder mystery.
SunLit: What were the biggest challenges you faced in writing this book?
Graham: My National Park Mysteries feature archaeologist Chuck Bender and his family as they encounter murderous intrigue in Americaโs iconic national parks, illuminating environmental and social justice issues in the parks along the way. Therefore, my particular challenge in โDeath Valley Duelโ was mixing the deadly fun of an ultra-running race gone murderously wrong with serious discussionโnot too much, I promise!โof the political shenanigans surrounding the use and abuse of water in the increasingly arid Intermountain West today.
SunLit: What do you want readers to take from this book?
Graham: First and foremost, in โDeath Valley Duelโ I want to take readers along on a fun and entertaining trail-running race across the desertโyes, killer rattlesnakes will be involvedโgiving them an up-close-and-personal look at the booming sport of ultra-trail racing and the crazed runners who pursue it. I also want to give readers a real taste of the harsh beauty that is Death Valley National Park.
SunLit: Whatโs it feel like to have just had your publisher, Torrey House Press, release a special 10th Anniversary Edition, with an all new foreword by Anne Hillerman, of โGrand Canyon Sacrifice,โ the first book in your National Park Mystery Series?
Graham: Iโm incredibly proud of the honor Torrey House has paid me in re-releasing โGrand Canyon Sacrifice,โ first published in 2014, and the tribute Anne gave me in writing the foreword for the special edition.
Iโm grateful to work with the vaunted, nonprofit, environmental and social justice publisher Torrey House Press (torreyhouse.org), and I appreciate being part of the hard-working Torrey House team, which is dedicated to protecting and preserving Americaโs incomparable public lands, and to giving voice to young Native American authors.
SunLit: Tell us about your next project.
Graham: Iโm coming home to Colorado with โGreat Sand Dunes Massacre,โ the tenth book in my National Park Mystery Series with Torrey House Press, set for release in August 2026.
In it, a macabre murder at the exact moment Chuck makes a baffling discovery in Great Sand Dunes National Park sends him racing to solve the vexing riddle behind the discovery, before his stepdaughter Rosie OrtegaโCarmelitaโs little sisterโand others fall victim to the killerโs vengeful wrath.
A few more quick items
Currently on your nightstand for recreational reading: โGathering Mistโ by Margaret Mizushima. The K-9 wisdom and veterinary knowledge Margaret imparts through relentless sheriffโs deputy Mattie Wray in this and all her Timber Creek, Colorado, K-9 Mysteries is spot on.
โNo Lie Lasts Foreverโ by Mark Stevens. In his just-released thriller, Mark takes readers deep into the disturbed mind of a darkly competitive serial killer prowling the mean streets of Denver. Soon to be a classic.
First book you remember really making an impression on you as a kid: โBrighty of the Grand Canyon,โ by Marguerite Henry, instilled in me as a youngster a love for the desert Southwest that endures to this day.
Best writing advice youโve ever received: โWrite, donโt think.โ Which is to say: donโt let your brain get in the way of writing that all-important first draft.
Favorite fictional literary character: I love how Anne Hillerman has brought Officer Bernadette Manuelito to the forefront in her ten-books-and-counting continuation of her father Tonyโs beloved Navajo mystery series. Anneโs latest, the just-released โShadow of the Solstice,โ is her best yet, in my opinion.
Literary guilty pleasure (title or genre): Thrillers, the more outrageous the better, all the day long.
Digital, print or audio โ favorite medium to consume literature: Iโm an old-school print reader. But I will say the terrific narrator of the audio versions of my books really brings my mysteries to life.
One book youโve read multiple times: โThe Sheltering Sky,โ by Paul Bowles, for its hauntingly spare descriptions of the Sahara Desert, and of love gone bad.
Other than writing utensils, one thing you must have within reach when you write: My tattered copy of Strunk and Whiteโs โThe Elements of Style,โ which includes the best, and shortest, description ever written for the correct usage of lay and lie.
Best antidote for writerโs block: When fear of failure strikes, I remind myself how lucky I am to have the opportunity to write. Itโs a gift I simply canโt allow myself to squander by letting doubt gum up the works.
Most valuable beta reader: My wife, Sue, offers vital input on all my first drafts. My books would not be books without her.
