Harvard
graduate Dr. Ian K. Smith has published several books and articles on diet and
fitness. His crime fiction novel The Blackbird Papers won the 2005 BCALA fiction Honor Book
Award.
His first book about Ashe Cayne, a former Chicago police officer and now private
investigator, is The Unspoken (Thomas & Mercer, 2020). This new series highlights Smith’s
affection for the city of Chicago, politics and all. It’s also a foodie tour,
as Cayne and his friends eat out often and their meals are described in
glorious detail.
Violet Gerrigan, wife of Randolph
Gerrigan, the Chicago real estate mogul, wants Cayne to find their daughter
Tinsley. Tinsley left home to visit her BFF but never arrived and no one has
seen or heard from her since. The police sent her to Cayne, as Tinsley is 25
years old and, in absence of evidence to the contrary, they have no reason to
believe that she did not leave on her own.
Cayne would
rather use the few remaining warmish days of the fall to perfect his golf swing,
but the Gerrigans are wealthy and influential so it’s in his best interests to
help them out. It does not take him long to learn that blonde blue-eyed Tinsley’s
serious boyfriend Tariq was a black honors graduate of DePaul University and
the nephew of Ice Culpeper, the leader of one of Chicago’s worst gangs. A few
days after Cayne’s meeting with Tariq, Tariq is found shot dead in a rundown
section of Chicago. Cayne is stunned. He expected to learn that Tinsley was
dead, not her boyfriend. The police now have a reason to enter the case and
Cayne finds himself working with his former mentor on the force.
The
ramifications of angering politically connected and potentially corrupt
individuals is never far from Cayne’s mind and makes him acutely conscious of
his actions. His sidekick and bodyguard Mechanic is great. Even the minor
characters are wonderful, including Cayne’s father who wanted him to become a
tennis star and the minister of the small church with security cameras in the
right place to help identify the culprit.
This is a fine contemporary private investigator story. However I found a subplot in which Cayne seeks justice for the victims of a pedophile priest unsettling. It’s unnecessary and I don’t see what it does to further the story or characterization. Considering its Stephen King overtones, I am somewhat surprised that an editor did not strike it as superfluous. Otherwise an excellent read. Especially recommended for fans of Chicago crime fiction and private investigator series.
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Publisher: Thomas & Mercer
(October 1, 2020)
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Language: English
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Hardcover: 300 pages
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ISBN-10: 1542025273
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ISBN-13: 978-1542025270
Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2022
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works
on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
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