“Well into middle age, Dave
has decided to retire for the sake of Cecil, the young TV reporter who loves
and cherishes him, and has too often risked his own life for Dave’s work. But
retirement does not come easily. Dave never did it for the money. He always had
that. Nor did he tirelessly work cases in hopes of chasing renown. It was
always the pursuit of the truth that drove Dave. He enjoyed the truth’s habit
of coming into direct conflict with bigotry, allowing him to surprise the
small-minded along the way. It doesn’t take much arm twisting, then, to get Dave back in the saddle when an
old friend in the public defender’s office asks him to help Andy Flanagan, a
shiftless young man accused of murdering a Vietnamese businessman to defend the
Old Fleet — a shantytown of houseboats that has been earmarked for development.
Beneath the surface of this oil-slicked slum lurks an international conspiracy
so appalling that Dave will regret postponing his retirement.”
As one review put it, "The One Where Dave Retires for 22 Hours." There are
some interesting aspects to this tenth mystery featuring Dave Brandstetter. I’m
not sure if it was the point, though. But there is a lot of bait and switching
going on here, as well as some-clumsy-and-obvious-who’s-doing it attacks on
Dave. The large cast of character also hinder Dave, as he tries to figure out the
connections between a hit at a restaurant –possibly done by the gang Lord Don
Pham- the murder of Le Van Minh –who could connected to the said crime lord-
and what all of this has to do with the Old Fleet and the man arrested for the
murder of Le. But in the end, I think Hansen is not interested in complicated plot,
with rings with-in rings. It’s more about what people do when they’re stuck
like a rat in the corner.
Hansen, as usual in his books, wonderfully describes the weather, the geography, exteriors and interiors, with just the right few words. The dialogue easily moves the story along. The other nice thing here, as I noted last book, is how Hansen is allowing Dave to age. This was something Westlake sort of avoided with his Dortmunder titles, even as he added more modern technology (at the time the book was written) to be folded into the books.
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