I loved Loren
Estleman’s series of seven historical mysteries set in Detroit. Whiskey
River (Bantam, 1990), describing the raucous Detroit underworld during
Prohibition, is on my list of all-time favorite pieces of crime fiction.
Stephen Mack Jones took me back to present-day Detroit, although some things
like corrupt local politicians never change. His protagonist August Snow is a
former cop who lives in his childhood home where he fiercely protects the working-class
neighborhood from drug pushers and attempts to exploit the disadvantaged
residents.
In Snow’s
third adventure Dead of Winter (Soho Crime, 2021), he’s approached by Ronaldo Ochoa, the owner
of the Mexican food factory where Snow’s mother worked all her life, to ask him
to buy the company. Ochoa is being pressured to sell by a Mr. Sloane who Ochoa
fears will tear the buildings down, taking away the jobs of his employees. Snow
doesn’t see himself as a purveyor of tortillas but he doesn’t like the way
Ochoa is being treated so he agrees to look into Mr. Sloane’s plans. He finds
smoke and shadows instead of a clear proposal of land ownership and intended usage
with complaisant local officials prepared to look the other way for the right
price. In no time his interest in the matter is noted and attempts to
discourage it quickly escalate to hoodlums from New Jersey who specialize in
removing obstacles.
While
unofficial private investigators, shady land developers, and crooked
politicians are nothing new, Snow offers a fresh spin on all three. His friends
and neighbors are endearing, some of the strongest supporting characters I have
seen for awhile. Amid the flying bullets and falling bodies, I was struck by
the polished, visually arresting writing. The scene where Snow dies and meets
his parents again is an entertaining and original take on the afterlife.
Like the
relentless throb of a toothache the issue of race dominates the story. Skin color
and associated social inequities overtly drive the behavior of many of the
characters, reflecting the current depressing reality. Recommended.
Booklist Starred Review.
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Publisher: Soho Crime (May 4, 2021)
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Language: English
·
Hardcover: 312 pages
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ISBN-10: 1641291028
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ISBN-13: 978-1641291026
Aubrey
Nye Hamilton ©2023
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
Terrific review, Aubrey. I know we talked about it on Saturday, but your reviews are always so well-written and researched. Thank you for sharing.
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