"Did handsome, charming
Eric Tarr, small-time actor, really kill himself? He left behind a lot of
wreckage broken promises, broken hearts, broken lives. Backtracking through his
father's past, young Alan, another of the betrayed, begins to see how many men
and women might have been bitter enough to murder Eric Tarr. By the time Alan
learns the truth, it becomes his own personal tragedy and, both legs in casts,
he waits helpless in a storm-shaken deserted house on the beach for his father's
killer to find and kill him too.”
While
published in 1982, Backtrack feels like more like a tale set in the 1950s, with
reminders of Hansen’s scathing look at Hollywood, Los Angeles, and gay life.
Like his Dave Brandsetter tales, young Alan Tarr is smarter than everyone else
when he decides to venture to Los Angeles for his father’s funeral –a father
that left him and his mother at 6 months and never returned. It’s a nebulous reason,
but for Alan, he needs to find some tangible reason to get there. But Alan
arrives to late (a misadventure involving hitchhiking -a very 60’s and 70s
thing- and a boy-ish looking girl named Gus prevents it. But soon, after
talking to a few people, including the cops, Alan becomes convinced his father’s
death was more than it seemed, and Alan ventures around the dark underbelly of
Los Angeles to find a truth –one he’s disgusted to learn, but none the less
seems attracted to as well.
There
are some memorable characters here, fully realized, with Hansen’s patent prose
style of not letting words go to waste. These books may be short, but there are
not many writers who can evoke mood and setting with without filler –so every
word does count. But like a few of his Brandstetter tales, the plot is a bit
over the top, and melodramatic for no good reason, along with a few characters that flip-flop on their sexuality like they’re
turning on a light switch.
Like a
lot of books of this genre, it also comes off as dated and I sometimes cringed
at causal racist and homophobic language. I understand this was what Hansen
grew up with, but it’s also a reminder that while he can laser focus his eye on
the lurid aspect of Hollywood, he could not give up the internal homophobia he might’ve
had (after all, he was gay, but was married to a woman –who was a lesbian- from
1943 until her death in 1994. They also had a child).
In the
end, it was a page turner. But your mileage will vary.