The Last
Act
by Brad Parks (Dutton, 2019) is a stand-alone thriller from the author of the
Carter Ross investigative reporter series. Tommy Jump’s acting career is
winding down after a promising start as a child actor. He has aged out of
juvenile parts, is too young for character parts, and is too short for dramatic
leads. His long-time agent has died and no one else is willing to take him on.
His girlfriend on the other hand is a talented painter and has generated a
great deal of interest in her work. She seems poised for a huge leap upward in
the art world. Tommy is determined to give her enough financial stability to
allow her to focus on her work, if he can just figure out how.
While he’s
wrestling with this economic quandary, a friend from high school, whom he has
not seen for years, approaches him with a request. The friend is with the FBI
now and the FBI is looking for an actor to infiltrate a minimum-security prison
in West Virginia to become friends with a new inmate, a former accountant to a
Mexican drug cartel who holds evidence on money laundering that would
effectively shut the cartel down. The FBI is offering $75,000 for Tommy to
agree to enter the prison under a fake identity and the same amount again if
Tommy learns where the evidence is hidden.
Despite his
girlfriend’s and his mother’s reservations, Tommy sees this opportunity as a
lifeline to financial security. He memorizes the details of the persona that
the FBI has created for him, signs a confession to a bank robbery under the new
name, and appears before a judge for sentencing. Before he knows it, he’s
actually in prison. While it’s minimum security, it’s still a prison. The food
is horrible, he is assigned to work in the prison laundry, and the prison
social worker keeps trying to make him sign up for classes. His cellmate is so
huge the standard cell bed had to be modified to fit him. He never speaks but
Tommy is still terrified of him.
The
characters are wonderful. An actor with a family as protagonist is a refreshing
change from alcoholic police detectives, military veterans with PTSD, and loner
private investigators. Tommy’s girlfriend and his mother are as fully developed
as he is; all of them exude ordinariness and normalcy. There are still
incredibly violent bits in the scenes with the cartel but Tommy could be the
neighbor down the street.
One of the
fun details in the book is the prison currency, which is foil packets of tuna,
not the usual cigarettes or other contraband. Bribes and favors are paid in
tuna. Tommy has to bribe his way into the poker game where the accountant plays
every week, so he asks his FBI contacts to provide several cases of tuna. They
are mystified but they do. The carefully developed plot has one twist after
another. Even the last few pages hold surprises. An excellent read!
Starred
review from Library Journal.
·
Hardcover: 384 pages
·
Publisher: Dutton (March 12, 2019)
·
Language: English
·
ISBN-10: 1524743534
·
ISBN-13: 978-1524743536
Aubrey Hamilton ©2019
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It
projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
No comments:
Post a Comment