Halley Sutton
is a writer and editor living in Los Angeles. Her debut novel The Lady
Upstairs (Putnam, 2020) is a startlingly original piece of noir that’s
earned praise from major reviewing outlets, including a starred review from
Kirkus. Reviews on Amazon and Goodreads are mixed, which is a testament to the
deeply dark nature of the tale.
Set in
contemporary Los Angeles, the main character and sole narrator of the story is
a woman named Jo. At a low point in her life Jo was recruited for a specialized
line of work by her coworker Lou, who is the contact with their elusive boss Jo
knows only as The Lady Upstairs.
The agency is
advertised as a recruiting and placement firm but its source of revenue is
blackmail. Its goal is to take revenge on men who exploit women: the Hollywood
producers, the powerful business executives, the corrupt politicians, the men
who have insulated themselves from retribution with their clout and their
money. Jo arranges for their quarries to meet appealing women and, when they
behave as usual, a hidden photographer collects incontrovertible evidence of
their vices. The targets of her stings are always willing to pay handsomely to
see that their venality stays secret.
Most of Jo’s
sizable income is earmarked to reduce a substantial debt. Once the slate is
wiped clean, Jo intends to leave the job and Los Angeles and start over
somewhere else. Freedom is in sight when one of her targets ends up dead, drawing
law enforcement attention to the agency and Jo. Jo desperately sets up one last
scam to win back the trust of The Lady Upstairs, recoup the lost money, and
divert the police.
In other hands this plot could have turned into a feminist caper, a light-hearted spin on “don’t get mad, get even.” But Sutton has turned out an intense piece of noir with unlikeable characters and desperate situations where none of the choices are good. Everything is filtered through Jo and her increasingly alcoholic perceptions, creating doubt in the reader as to what really is happening. The ending seems inevitable. An acutely suspenseful story, even though I realized early on what was meant to be a big reveal near the end of the book. Halley Sutton is an author to watch.
·
Publisher: G.P. Putnam's Sons (November 17, 2020)
·
Language: English
·
Paperback: 320 pages
·
ISBN-10: 0593187733
· ISBN-13: 978-0593187739
Aubrey Hamilton ©2021
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who
works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
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