After a long absence, Holland Taylor, ex-cop and now private
investigator in St. Paul, Minnesota, returns in Darkness, Sing Me A Song by David Housewright (Minotaur,
2018). This is the fourth book featuring Taylor; the first, Penance,
won the 1996 Edgar for Best First Novel. Housewright has a second series of 14
titles so far, also set in St. Paul, with another ex-cop named Rushmore
McKenzie. His short stories appear in perhaps a dozen anthologies, many of them
from the Minnesota Crime Wave, a group of well-known Minnesota crime writers.
(What is it about Minnesota that makes so many of its residents think about
felonies?)
Holland Taylor is in a rut. He knows it, his friends know
it, and his mother reminds him of it repeatedly. He still has no real
inclination to do anything about it, so he continues to perform routine
background investigations and such to earn a living without giving it much thought.
One of the lawyers he and his partner Freddie do a lot of work for pulls him
into the defense of Eleanor Barrington, a wealthy socialite matron who is
accused of killing her son’s girlfriend. Since there is a credible eyewitness
to the shooting, this is going to be an elusive rabbit to pull out of the hat.
Almost immediately a resourceful newspaper reporter learns
that the dead girl was not who she said she was. There is no person with that
name and that background, and Holland sets out to learn who she really was and
what or who she was hiding from. Along the way he learns the Barrington family
owns a country estate that is considered desirable property by a firm that
supplies sand to the fracking industry. The digging done so far has
significantly damaged the surrounding town and the residents are up in arms
just as the company seeks to acquire more land by eminent domain to expand
their operation. Some of the fracking industry proponents are convinced Holland
is in the area to stop it and seek to dissuade his involvement by physical
means.
I was happy to see that Holland still has Ogilvy, the French
lop-eared rabbit, who roams the apartment freely, chewing on electrical cords.
Holland still has a problematic romantic life but a promising candidate appears
in this book, a professor from a local university.
I like everything I have ever read by David Housewright. His
characters are consistently and realistically sketched, even if I wouldn’t want
to actually meet some of them. His writing, pacing, and plotting are compact
and economical without giving the impression of terseness or abruptness. Only
when the book ended did I realize that I couldn’t think of a single scene or
character that didn’t move the story or Holland forward in some way, yet all
threads were neatly tied off and nothing was left unaddressed. He is another
author that deserves a larger audience.
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Hardcover: 288 pages
·
Publisher: Minotaur Books (January 2, 2018)
·
Language: English
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ISBN-10: 125009447X
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ISBN-13: 978-1250094476
Aubrey Hamilton ©2018
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal
IT projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
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