Once, years ago, I tried to report a story about a girl who鈥檇 gone missing on the outskirts of a small town located in the wilderness of British Columbia. I hiked a footpath a quarter-mile from where she was last seen, then peered down the long gravel driveway where she vanished. I remember feeling chilled. My notes say things like: 鈥淭ree trunks wearing mossy fur coats.鈥 鈥淔ireweed in the ditch.鈥 鈥淟onely.鈥 I never wrote that story, but I never forgot the girl. There鈥檚 something especially haunting about people who disappear in the outdoors or are found dead there from unnatural causes. These tales get under our skin.聽
What frightens and rivets us, I think, is the apparent randomness: What are the odds of a person crossing paths with a killer on an empty trail? City dwellers are inured to the violence on the evening news, but an unexplained disappearance in a place that鈥檚 supposed to be a safe retreat? It can feel like a lightning strike.

Two new books tell the stories of people who, each for their own reasons, couldn鈥檛 let go of someone killed in a wild or forgotten place. In ($28, Random House), out February 25, journalist and first-time author Sierra Crane Murdoch follows an Arikara woman named Lissa Yellow Bird who is determined to solve the mystery of a missing white oil worker on the North Dakota reservation where her family lives. The book offers a gripping narrative of Yellow Bird鈥檚 obsession with the case, but it鈥檚 also about the harsh history of the land where the man vanished, how it was flooded and remade, first by an uncaring federal government and then again by industry. Yellow Bird teaches us that some things aren鈥檛 random at all鈥攖hat a crime, and its resolution, can be a product of a time and a place, and a history bringing together the people involved.聽

Philadelphia-based writer Emma Copley Eisenberg鈥檚 ($27, Hachette), released on January 21, is also deeply rooted in time and place. It looks back at the so-called Rainbow Murders: two young women shot to death in West Virginia in 1980 while hitchhiking to the Rainbow Gathering, an annual counterculture festival held in national forests across the country. Nearly three decades later, Eisenberg moved to the area to work for a youth organization and became fascinated by the killings. Her book vividly recounts the lives of the two murdered women, what鈥檚 known of their last days, and the twists and turns of the police investigation as it unfolded over many years. But it also describes her own time in mountainous Pocahontas County, her immersion in the community, and her experiences there with men and women and sex and consent. Young women aren鈥檛 murdered in a vacuum, she reminds us鈥攁nd the stories we tell about their deaths grow out of our culture, too.