Barry is back again this week for FFB. Make sure you
check out the full list of books over at Patti’s blog.
A JADE IN ARIES (1970) by Tucker Coe
Reviewed by Barry Ergang
When I was twelve years old I
read my first Perry Mason mystery, The
Case of the Vagabond Virgin, and I was hooked. I read a dozen more, one
right after another, until I was over-saturated with Erle Stanley Gardner’s
style and approach in this particular series. (He had a multitude of series,
and his style varied accordingly, as I learned over time.) Many years went by
before I picked up another Mason novel. As a result of that experience, I
generally made it a point to avoid consecutive readings of works by a given
author, lest I burn out on him or her. There were probably a few exceptions,
but I never binged on anyone else to the extent I did with Gardner.
I mention this because I read
the book under consideration here, which was written by Donald E. Westlake
under his Tucker Coe pen name, immediately after finishing Drowned Hopes.
The books are radically different in style and approach—A Jade in Aries is not remotely comical, whereas Drowned Hopes emphatically is—and each
is, in turn, very different from the novels he wrote under his Richard Stark
pen name.
A Jade in Aries
is the fourth in a five-book series narrated by former NYPD detective Mitchell
Tobin, a man disgraced and punishing himself for it by literally and
figuratively both digging a hole to retreat into and walling himself off from
society as much as possible. He does not have a private detective’s license,
but has occasionally undertaken investigations to supplement the money his wife
Kate earns from a part-time job.
This story begins when Tobin
is approached on Wednesday, January 7th, by a young gay man, Ronald
Cornell, owner of a men’s boutique. He insists that his partner—personal and
professional—Jamie Dearborn, was murdered, and that the police detective, Aldo
Manzoni, won’t do anything about it, having written it off as what he calls a
case of the “Changeable Sailor.” Disbelieving this, certain that Jamie’s killer
is someone he and others in his circle know, Cornell is determined to identify
him. He is seriously into astrology, and only needs Tobin’s help to find out
the exact dates and times of birth of the six men he’s narrowed his list of
suspects to. Tobin calls an old cop friend in Missing Persons, tells him what
he needs, and then tells Cornell to call the friend directly the following
Monday.
Over breakfast Tuesday
morning, Kate Tobin reads a newspaper story she shares with her husband, he
having told her about his meeting with Cornell. The story says Cornell is in
the hospital after an attempted suicide. Based on the alleged method and what
he observed about Cornell, Mitch Tobin refutes the story, sure that Cornell was
assaulted, but refuses to get involved. When Kate
subsequently—trying to wear down his resistance—tells her husband that she visited Cornell in the hospital, that he has made an extremely generous offer in exchange for Mitch’s help—and they can certainly use the money—that the bigoted, homophobic Detective Manzoni insists Cornell is emotionally unbalanced and should be institutionalized, Tobin caves in and undertakes the investigation. The result is an absorbing character-driven story as Tobin deals with a variety of personalities, including the oppositional Manzoni, from the Cornell/Dearborn social circle to solve Cornell’s assault and two murders.
subsequently—trying to wear down his resistance—tells her husband that she visited Cornell in the hospital, that he has made an extremely generous offer in exchange for Mitch’s help—and they can certainly use the money—that the bigoted, homophobic Detective Manzoni insists Cornell is emotionally unbalanced and should be institutionalized, Tobin caves in and undertakes the investigation. The result is an absorbing character-driven story as Tobin deals with a variety of personalities, including the oppositional Manzoni, from the Cornell/Dearborn social circle to solve Cornell’s assault and two murders.
Homophobes are unlikely to
read A Jade in Aries. More
enlightened readers will probably have to make, as I did, reactive adjustments concerning
the context of the time in which it was written, specifically with regard to
language and attitude. I was 23 when it was published and don’t recall gay being a synonym for homosexual back then. Thus, homosexual is the term used throughout,
unless someone disparagingly says queer
or faggot, as some characters do. One
who uses faggot a couple of times is
Tobin himself, which I found somewhat disconcerting since he’s sympathetic to
Cornell’s plight, and treats those in Cornell’s coterie the same way he’d treat
heterosexuals: with respect or contempt based on how they comported themselves
and responded to him.
In Chapter Eight, looking at
his fifteen-year-old son, Tobin briefly wonders whether the boy might become
homosexual, as if it were a matter of choice or upbringing: “I don’t know if I
can be proved right or wrong, but I hold to the belief that homosexuality
almost always shows a failure of some kind on the part of the parents. The
failure of the father to be a man, or of the mother to be a woman, or of both
to give their child security and love. Whatever the particular style of the
failure, I think it almost always lies in the parents when the son emerges to
adulthood as a homosexual.”
Reading that, I couldn’t help
but wonder if it was strictly Tobin the fictional character speaking, or if it
was Westlake the author using Tobin as a conduit for his own beliefs. If the
latter, I wonder if Westlake’s attitude changed during the decades prior to his
death as more became known about human sexuality.
I found A Jade in Aries engrossing, compelling, and hard to put down, even
though I wouldn’t necessarily call it a “great” mystery novel, and can
recommend it to those who don’t object to a major aspect of its subject matter.
© 2015 Barry Ergang
Derringer Award-winner Barry Ergang’s written work has
appeared in numerous publications, print and electronic. Some of it is
available at Amazon
and at Smashwords. His website is http://www.writetrack.yolasite.com/.
1 comment:
You're right about the need to put a book in its historical context. A JADE IN ARIES might not be "politically correct" according to today's standards but it was written decades ago. It's like the schools who ban Mark Twain for what he wrote over 100 years ago.
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