“Jacob Asch is called in by boxing promoter Jack Schwartz to help out Carlos Realango, an Argentine heavyweight whose career is on the skids. Carlos has been receiving threatening phone calls, and his manager and mistress, brassy blonde Susan Mezzano, thinks her husband is responsible. It seems a routine case until the down-and-out boxer is shot at Moonfire Ranch, a fancy brothel owned by Susan's husband. The police are calling it justifiable homicide, but Asch smells murder and something more than a lovers' quarrel.”
The fourth Jacob Asch novel follows the same sort of set-up the three previous has, which has him be hired to investigate a person who generally ends up dead. And while investigating, Jake not only seemly gets beat up a few times, but as well, the murder becomes less important (though it’s still front and center) as writer Lyon’s leans into all the “guest-cast” so to speak, and their dark and mostly icky moral codes.
But here, in Dead Ringer, the story is a bit overspun and goes on longer than seemly necessary. Yes, we get long-winded takes and Chandler-esque prose, but a lot of it seems designed to make the tale longer and much deeper than it really is. The problem with some of these nior thrillers is everyone are just horrible, trope filled people. Take the city of Reno, which is seems like a dead end town, mashed with potential mob influences and dirty cops who can (and probably do) get away with falsifying records, arresting and beating up people they don’t particularly like – it’s all something we’ve seen before.
In Lyon’s universe, there is not much good, which sort of puts Asch above everyone. It’s a little odd that no matter where Asch goes, who he investigates, he is the Angel among the dirty devils of the world.
Since this was the last book I owned, I may be a while before I revisit and purchase the seven remaining volumes. But this is not a happy world and maybe it’s time to find something a little less nihilistic.





