Richard Helms is a retired forensic
psychologist turned college professor turned full time writer. He has written
more than two dozen novels and many short stories. His books have been
nominated eight times for the Private Eye Writers of America Shamus Award, winning
the award for Brittle Karma in 2021. He has also won
the Short Mystery Fiction Society Derringer Award, the Killer Nashville Silver
Falchion, the Macavity, the ITW Thriller Award, and the Shamus.
His series characters include
San Francisco private investigator Eamon Gold, forensic psychologist and jazz
musician Pat Gallegher in New Orleans, North Carolina police chief Judd
Wheeler, and former Charleston police detective and private investigator
Whitlock.
Eamon Gold, a contemporary private
investigator in San Francisco, has appeared in four books so far; the fifth is
expected to be released in 2026. In Brittle Karma (Barbadoes Hall, 2020)
Gold is approached by a potential new client: Abner Carlisle has been recently
released from prison after a 30-year stay for his part in an armored car heist
that yielded $20 million, more than $49 million in 2025. He is looking for the
surviving member of the gang, Eddie Rice, who escaped capture and was supposed
to hold the take for everyone else. As might be expected, Rice vanished along
with the money.
Gold isn’t interested in
working for Carlisle. He strongly suspects that Carlisle plans to retrieve the
money from Rice and then administer a bullet or two. Gold refers him to another
local PI and forgets about it until a local homicide detective tells him
Carlisle’s body was found in a low-rent hotel room. Rice is the obvious suspect
but no one knows where he is, what he has been doing for the past 20 years, or
even what he looks like.
Gold is curious enough to ask
a few questions and learns that the insurance company paid the claim on the
lost money long ago but would be happy to accept any of it that Gold might be
able to locate, less of course a finder’s fee. Money is always nice of course
so Gold undertakes a search in earnest, encountering a range of well-rounded
characters such as the hard-drinking wife of a City supervisor, an elderly
elementary school lunch lady living in a high-end retirement community with all
expenses paid, and a retired Army Ranger serving as a prominent mobster’s
bodyguard. The compulsive car thief who steals Gold’s ride is my favorite.
The plot is outstanding; a
tightly integrated story line yields a completely unexpected solution. The writing
is reminiscent of the early Nameless Detective stories by Bill Pronzini, who
also made San Francisco his beat. Fans of Spenser, Elvis Cole, and Nameless
will want to look at Eamon Gold’s adventures.
·
Publisher:
Barbadoes
Hall Communications (November 14, 2020)
·
Language:
English
·
Paperback:
267 pages
·
ISBN-10:
097101597X
·
ISBN-13:
978-0971015975
Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4ebZiKZ
Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2025
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.


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