Lesser Evils
by Joe Flanagan (Europa Editions, 2016) is an astonishing piece of noir fiction.
Bill Warren, its protagonist, is surrounded by corruption in his small Cape Cod
town of 1957, yet he remains convinced of the need to be an honest, fair, and upright
human being. Bill is the acting police chief in Barnstable while the police
chief is on medical leave. He is the sole support of a disabled son since his
alcoholic wife wandered away years ago; he’s trying hard to care for young Mike
while doing his best on the job. His rectitude backfires on him sometimes, as
when he discovered the antique store owned by a gay couple is being robbed but
no one on his force responds to the reports. He investigates himself and finds
the thief to be the son of one of the selectmen, who threatens him with his job
if he doesn’t close the case. While he damages his standing with the very
people who can give him the chief of police position permanently, he is able to
return the latest stolen items to the store owners, much to their surprise and
gratitude.
Someone is killing young boys on Bill’s turf.
His team turns out in full force only to have a publicity-hungry State Police
captain sweep the case out from under them. Another family disappears after
they reported violent treatment by a local group of gamblers in an attempt to
collect money. An investigation of the bar that fronts the gambling den links
the group to organized crime in Boston. Bill organizes a raid on the place,
only to find it cleaned out and the pigeons flown – someone within his own team
is feeding them information.
There are some great characters here. The local
politicians are deliciously seedy. The pedophiles pulled in for interviews are
skin-crawlingly creepy. A doctor trolling for patients to try his new drug on
betrayed every ethic of his job. A prominent subplot involves Father Boyle, a
sad priest who believes he’s lost his faith and his calling but he continues to
carry out his duties at the local hospital and the school for disabled children
run by a group of nuns. Father Boyle has a confused past; his grasp on reality
doesn’t seem to be firmly in place. He’s deeply committed to the children in
the school, where they are delighted to see him on his visits. I held my breath
waiting for him to be accused of the murders. Like Bill Warren, he would have
been unable to defend himself. Instead the subplot resolves unexpectedly in
possibly the most unusual way I can remember in crime fiction.
This book is deeply dark and violent, showing
humanity at its absolute worst at moments. I nearly stopped reading midway. The
writing and the story became so compelling I was driven to learn how it all
ended and a wonderful ending full of optimism it is. Publishers Weekly starred
review.
- Paperback:
416 pages
- Publisher:
Europa Editions; First Edition (March 1, 2016)
- Language:
English
- ISBN-10: 1609453107
- ISBN-13: 978-1609453107
Aubrey Hamilton ©2020
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It
projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
1 comment:
A fine review of what appears to be an excellent read. Thanks for sharing.
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