Last year’s Bouchercon was in Toronto. As always
after an encounter with the Canadian mystery writing community, I come away
determined to identify and incorporate more Canadian authors into my reading.
That is easier to say than to do, apparently. I am avoiding book purchases
while downsizing the current holdings so I searched the library catalogs in the
area--I have access to collections in Virginia, Maryland, and the District of
Columbia--without success. Fewer Canadian and Australian mysteries are to be
found in the area libraries while English, Irish, and Scottish are
well-represented. Why would be an interesting investigation. So I threw in the
towel and bought a few books by Canadian authors, including a Reid Bennett title
by Ted Wood. Bennett features in 10 procedurals released between 1983 and 1995 as
the only law enforcement agent in fictional Murphy’s Harbor, a small resort
town in Ontario. His sidekick Sam the German shepherd fills in for the missing
support staff, sniffing out drugs and taking down bad guys as needed.
In Flashback (Scribner, 1992) Bennett’s
attention is divided between his job and the impending arrival of his first
child. In a surprisingly complicated plot, teen gangs target local shops for
whirlwind destruction, a submerged car is found in the nearby lake with a body
inside, and a felon who vowed vengeance on Bennett years earlier escapes prison.
The identity of the drowned woman seems clear at first but locating her husband
to confirm it proves to be difficult. The name of a well-known Toronto film
producer who has a week-end cottage in town crops up often enough to indicate
involvement in this unprecedented crime wave but the nature of that involvement
is ambiguous. Bennett runs back and forth between the hospital where his wife
is undergoing a lengthy labor and his town where crime scenes and suspects
continue to shift. An understated theme that runs throughout is the town’s
relationship to the Native Americans on the nearby reservation.
Ted Wood’s first-hand knowledge of life as a
Toronto police officer comes through clearly in these early police procedurals.
The first book in the series Dead in the Water was shortlisted
for the
Wood’s books in both series occasionally crop up
in the Kindle deals of the day lists that circulate widely. In any form they
are well worth the committed mystery reader’s attention.
·
Hardcover: 224 pages
·
Publisher: Scribner; 1st American ed edition (August 1,
1992)
·
Language: English
·
ISBN-10: 0684194147
·
ISBN-13: 978-0684194141
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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