“Dave Brandstetter's afternoon
does not begin well: his ex-boyfriend picks him up at the airport, and the ride
home — in bumper-to-bumper Los Angeles traffic — is one long argument between
them. The insurance investigator's day gets worse when he finds a man — bloody,
rain-soaked, and ice cold — lying on his porch, killed by a stab wound while
Dave was out of town. There is a serial killer loose in Los Angeles, and this
man is his sixth victim. Like the others, he had already been marked for death
– by the unforgiving plague known as AIDS. Someone is targeting sick men in the
city, and Dave's search for the killer leads him into the dark side of gay Los
Angeles, where death comes without warning and life is a fearful dream.”
For the
ninth book in this excellent series, Hansen folds the AIDS crisis of the 1980s
into the narrative. I suppose, it was just a matter of time, considering the
setting of these novels and the fact that Dave is an openly gay, yet “straight”
appearing investigator. Because Hansen lived through this era, he takes a very
brutal look at the epidemic, as he details the thousands of young men who are
infected with HIV and growing homophobia and outright hatred gay men suffered
during the period. It has a sometime unvarnished truth about it, with the squalid and
sad life of those who were impacted the most, but as always, Dave remains
honest, emphatic and loving.
The
mystery, of course, is a bit low key in some way, as Dave’s investigation is
personal. It’s also a bit of bait and switch, with your typical red herrings of
the genre. Still, this books moves swiftly and you get a cast of interesting, sometimes
horrible, characters, both old and new.
The only
silly part –Hansen is seemly a great set-up artist and then the tales sort of
go into weird, unbelievable mode towards the end- is his ongoing relationship with
Cecil. I don’t think Hansen nailed down Dave’s birthday (though if I was to use
Hansen’s birth year, Dave would be 63-64 in 1987), but it’s clear Dave is well
into his 50s and Cecil is twenty-five. Anyways, Brandstetter's relationship
with the boyfriend has hit a bump because Cecil went a little overboard by
marrying a blind girl he thought he could help (those events were chronicled in
the last book, The Little Dog Laughed). Here, a few months later, Dave is
missing Cecil and our young cub reporter feels stuck, but because he’s
honorable, he can’t see a way out. But all of this is resolved in the final
pages, in a weird, deus ex machine
writers (or publishers?) choice. It’s just too convenient, I guess.
But the book adds a blunt feeling of dread over
these young men, adding a bleak and the sometimes horrible inaction of people
and government during one of the darkest health crises of the latter half of
the 20th Century.
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