HEAD
WOUNDS (2018) by Dennis Palumbo
Reviewed
by Barry Ergang
Almost
twelve years prior to the story’s present, clinical psychologist Dr. Daniel
Rinaldi and his wife Barbara were what appeared to be the victims of a mugging
“by an armed thug in a hoodie,” an incident which left Barbara dead and Rinaldi
severely wounded. He has been haunted by the incident ever since in a grotesque
kind of irony, because as a consultant to the Pittsburgh Police Department (although
not without his antagonists therein), he numbers among his clientele both civilian
crime victims and crime-fighting professionals who have been traumatized by
violent events. Complicating his life further is the dossier given to him by a
dying man which suggests that Barbara’s death was not the result of a random
mugging but a deliberate murder. The problem is, the assailant’s “face was
almost totally obscured by the peaked hood and the black of night,” so his
identity is unknown.
When
Head Wounds opens, Rinaldi is still emotionally
contending with episodes recounted in Phantom Limb. While sipping Jack
Daniels and listening to Miles Davis on his stereo system, when he’s nearly
killed by a bullet that shatters the picture window of the front room of his
house, the result of a domestic dispute between neighbors Eddie Burke and his
wealthy girlfriend Joy Steadman, Rinaldi is ultimately drawn into a nightmarish
cat-and-mouse contest that pits him against his late wife’s psychopathic killer.
Unlike
its predecessors in the series, Head
Wounds is not a whodunit, so it is not a spoiler to reveal that the novel’s
cunning psychopathic villain is the extremely tech-savvy erotomaniac Sebastian
Maddox, who could give Hannibal Lecter a run for his money when it comes to
soulless savagery. In his zeal to torment and then eventually kill Rinaldi,
Maddox goes after those who are close to the psychologist relationally and/or
professionally, in the process putting the reader through the emotional ringer
as well. I’ll refrain from going into details because I don’t want to diminish
anyone’s page-turning excitement—of which there is a cornucopia.
The
skillfully written and structured Head Wounds
is strong on characterization and a sense of place, undoubtedly the result of
the author’s background as a working psychotherapist and native Pittsburghian.
A state-of-the-art thriller, it could function as a textbook about how to
create and then intensify already high-tension situations in suspense fiction.
The
fifth novel in a series well worth the time of readers who don’t object to
realistic (i.e., strong) street
language and on-page violence as well as some—but
not overdone—on-page sexuality, Dennis Palumbo’s latest entry in the Daniel Rinaldi
series is one of those gems about which I’d advise thriller fans to start only if they haven’t other things they
absolutely must do, because they won’t want to put it down once they’ve read the
first few pages.
In
case you hadn’t already guessed, Head
Wounds is unequivocally and enthusiastically recommended.
© 2018 Barry Ergang
Some
of Derringer Award-winner Barry Ergang’s work is available at Amazon
and Smashwords.
The latter site is running its annual sale through the month of July. Barry and
Kevin Tipple are among the participating authors, so take advantage of their
reduced prices.
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