For this first Friday in September, I offer
you an all new review of a book series that I started only because of Aubrey
Hamilton. She recently reviewed the ninth book in this series titled Flashback.
It sounded so good I wondered if the Dallas Public Library had them. They have
most of the series including the first several. That allows me to meet my
compulsion to read series in order from the start. Because the books were
available you have this new review today to consider. For more reviews and
books you should consider, head over to Patti Abbott’s blog.
Published in 1983, Dead In The Water begins the series
featuring Chief of Police Reid Bennett. Ex-military, ex Toronto officer, this
disgraced-- in the eyes of some—cop is the Chief of Police for Murphy’s Harbor
located in the Muskoka cottage country. Roughly two hundred miles north of
Toronto, Murphy’s Harbor is a resort town where nothing violent ever happens.
The worst of it is dealing with drunk tourists, drunk residents, and those,
adult and teen, that like to pick at the scab of what Bennett did one night in
Toronto.
Bennett is “Chief” in name only as the police force is pretty much
him. He does have some help answering phones and such by a grizzled WWII ex vet
named Murphy. Then there is, Sam, a German shepherd that he relies on to help
him as needed.
So,
when the tourists are upset, Chief of Police Reid Bennett is the only one to
call and it does not matter if Bennet has lady friend spending the Friday night
or the fact that it is three in the morning. Not only does the phone call from
Murphy make it clear that there are upset tourists involved, so is the son of a
town councilor. Politics and tourism are always a deadly combination in a town
that relies on tourists to survive.
Ken
Sullivan’s son was out on a date with the daughter of a tourist. Lucy for the
young man that she could handle herself as she pulled him back into the boat after
he was run over and hit with the propeller. She saved his life. Once he gets
her dad out of the way and calmed down a bit, he talks to Jane Bryant and
learns the boat they were in hit something in the channel. Something was
out there in the water and they never saw it before they hit it and the young
man was ejected from the boat.
By
just before dawn he finds the boat floating about a mile upstream from the marina
dock Chief Bennet and his police dog, Sam, had left minutes earlier. He tows it
back to the dock where he finds Murphy waiting for him. Murphy recognizes the
boat and tells Chief Bennet that the boat belongs to a good friend, Ross
Winslow. Why that boat was out there on the water, with no sign that the
fishing rods had been deployed or that anyone one was or had been onboard, is
strange.
After
some much needed sleep, Bennett learns that Winslow, a punctual man in his
routines, seems to be missing. If that is not enough, a biker gang Bennett tangled
with back in Toronto may be headed their way and looking to settle some scores
with Bennett.
Things escalate rapidly in Dead In The Water by Ted Wood. New
York thugs, a damsel in distress, plenty of action with violent outcomes, and
more make this police procedural a very good read. It is also the first book of
the series I would not have gone looking for if not for the review work of
Aubrey Hamilton. She recently reviewed Flashback
which is the ninth book in the series. As I am compelled to read all
series from the beginning, I started here. Dead In The Water by Ted Wood is a
great start to a series.
Dead In The Water
Ted Wood
Charles Scribner’s Sons
1983
ISBN# 0-684-17958-X
Hardback (also available in
paperback and digital formats)
175 Pages
Material
supplied by the good folks of the Dallas Public Library.
Kevin
R. Tipple ©2018
7 comments:
I enjoyed this when I read it a handful of years ago. Since then I've read a couple others in the series. I recall not enjoying all the Sam The Wonder Dog Does Amazing Things! parts.
I finished the second one in the series while hanging out at UTD yesterday afternoon/evening waiting for Scott to get out of class. So far, I am still okay with SAM THE WONDER DOG though I can see how that would grate after awhile.
I checked my notes and I've only read two Wood novels so far. That other book was WHEN THE KILLING STARTS. I enjoyed WHEN's Northern Ontario setting with Bennett out in the middle of the forest. The mercenary angle was a bit of a stretch from reality but makes perfect sense for that time of the mid-'80s when Central America was a cauldron.
This is an excellent series, at least through book 4 or 5, though after that I don't remember as much about them, as that's how far I got rereading them. I liked Sam's character, and a one-man police force can certainly stand a well trained "canine officer". Especially when he can "keep" and "hold". MURDER ON ICE may still be my favorite.
Having just finished MURDER ON ICE the other night (review appears on FFB in a couple of weeks), I think that book might be better than this one. That book is a really good book.
Cool. I'll have to get back to the series. I recall another blogger posting in FFB about how Wood just up and stopped publishing. A bit surprising but maybe sales petered out and his publisher dropped him.
Could be. Somebody wrote me a week or two ago and said that he passed away. Don't know what did happen. Just know I enjoy the books.
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