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Mysteries

The return of Spenser adds depth to a series -- and more.

By Paula L. Woods, The Washington Post, Sunday, April 3, 2005

Cold Case

Robert B. Parker has written so many Spenser novels that they stand almost as legend, full of faces and places we've come to know by heart. The series's longevity lends the characters an air of immutability, as if Spenser, the Marlowesque P.I.; Hawk, his black alter ego; Susan Silverman, Spenser's lady love; and the rest will never age, even though the first Spenser mystery, The Godwulf Manuscript, appeared in 1973.

Yet there have been subtle changes over the 30-plus books, hints that time moves on and that our heroes are, if not preternaturally young, at least mortal. One of the clearest signals came in 1997's Small Vices, when Spenser was almost killed and was nursed back to health by Hawk and Susan. Now, in Cold Service (Putnam's, $24.95), Hawk is shot trying to protect bookie Luther Gillespie and his family from the Ukrainian mob. With Gillespie and most of his family wiped out, Hawk is honor-bound to avenge their deaths, and Spenser is equally bound to assist. But when the Boston police arrest a suspect in a tavern-owner's murder, and he fingers the men responsible for the Gillespie hit, it appears that Hawk will not get to exact his revenge. Then the suspect changes his story and refuses to give up his accomplices, a reversal that sets them free and breathes new life into Hawk's quest for vengeance.

With major legwork provided by Spenser, Hawk's search leads to the small town of Marshport, where traditionally black-run vice, narcotics and other criminal enterprises have been usurped by the same Ukrainian mobsters who shot Hawk and whose activities are being protected by Mayor Boots Podolak as well as a good chunk of the Marshport police force. Watching Hawk and Spenser outfox Boots and the mobsters, complete with echoes from the film "High Noon," is a treat even as our heroes' exploits raise questions about the blind eye that modern law enforcement seems willing to turn on their vigilante activities.

Some quietly powerful scenes between Spenser and Hawk show the depth of their long-term friendship, and equally thoughtful exchanges between Spenser and Susan reveal an enduring and enviable love. Allthis in a package that features writing as lean and seductive as poetry -- plus Hawk dishing up his own brand of retribution -- makes Cold Service one hot mystery.

Game Boy

Also hot, literally, is Ricky Smith, an overweight gambler who jumps from the fifth floor of a burning Las Vegas hotel in the opening pages of Mr. Lucky: A Novel of High Stakes (Ballantine, $19.95). This is the fifth installment of James Swain's series featuring ex-Atlantic City cop Tony Valentine, now head of Grift Sense, a consulting firm that specializes in catching cheaters for casinos all over the world. Ricky lands in the pool, emerges dripping wet and wanders into the Mint Casino across the street, where he begins to win every bet at every table on the premises. A million dollars later, Ricky's feats have earned him the name Mr. Lucky in the national media and drawn the attention of Mint Casino's management and the Nevada Gaming Control Board, which enlist the help of Valentine and his son Gerry in determining whether "Ricky's halo was really a pair of horns."

Valentine decides to check out Ricky in the gambler's hometown of Slippery Rock, N.C., a picture-postcard-perfect town straight out of a Jan Karon novel, while Gerry heads for a casino in Gulfport, Miss., to interview Tex "All In" Snyder, a World Series of Poker champion whom Ricky bested during his lucky streak at the Mint. Swain recounts the dual adventures of father and son with wit and an impeccable sense of pacing. Readers will keep turning pages even as they want to linger over the numerous gambling scams and schemes that Valentine elucidates along the way.

Swain has hit on a winning combination in Mr. Lucky, creating not only considerable thrills but a rogue's gallery of likable characters, including Mabel Struck, Tony's colorful neighbor and assistant; Gerry, who is desperately trying to change his grifting ways; and Ricky Smith himself, who still earns our sympathy after we realize that he's a first-class jerk. And Swain's take on what lurks beneath the surface of an all-American small town gives the plot a few extra twists. But the vibrant heart of Mr. Lucky and the series is Tony Valentine, who can not only suss out casino scams but cares deeply about the people in his life and the lives he must occasionally take. He's the kind of man you wouldn't mind having on your side in a high-stakes poker game, let alone the game of life.

The Drugged Detective

On the other hand, another ex-cop, Jack Taylor, is a mess, someone you'd be hard-pressed to call anything close to a hero. Over the course of three books in Ken Bruen's searing noir series set in Ireland, Taylor has been on a slow, downward spiral, fueled by prodigious amounts of Irish whisky and enough bad decisions to populate his nightmares for years to come: "The line of dead who accuse me at every turn of sleep, they come in silent dread, the eyes fixed on me as I twist and moan in vain hope of escape."

In The Magdalen Martyrs (St. Martin's/Minotaur, $22.95), Taylor is trying sobriety after a rough case and a disastrously short marriage landed him back in Galway at a residential hotel, with a wardrobe composed of thrift-shop suits. In spite of his flaws, we keep rooting for Taylor, a man who loves books and is as likely to quote Raymond Chandler, Thomas Merton or W.B. Yeats as throw a punch.

Two cases provide Taylor with a new chance at redemption. In one, gangster Bill Cassell asks him to find Rita Monroe, one of the women confined to the infamous Magdalen laundries, who befriended and protected Cassell's now-deceased mother; in the other, Terry Boyle, a gay businessman, hires Taylor to prove that his stepmother killed his wealthy father. But Taylor can't lay off the booze, pills and coke, and soon botches both jobs, leading to two murders and an affair with Boyle's stepmother that has deadly consequences.

As grim as this may sound, readers of The Magdalen Martyrs will find themselves hoping that Taylor can snatch a measure of victory from the train wreck his life has become. Our fascination is due in large part to Bruen's spare, evocative prose, which, not unlike Parker's, reduces a man and his demons to their essences without diminishing either.

In the Name of the Father

Michael Rips exerts a similar power in The Face of a Naked Lady: An Omaha Family Mystery (Houghton Mifflin, $24), a memoir that reads like a detective novel. Several years after the death of his father, the unassuming owner of an optical factory, Rips returned to Omaha to select mementos to take back to New York and stumbled upon a portfolio of drawings his father had made of a nude black woman, completely unknown to Rips or his family. The discovery suggested intriguing depths to his father's otherwise placid persona; Rips felt compelled to search for the unknown woman in the drawings and, in a sense, for the equally obscure man who made them. He hoped, Rips writes, that "everything would be clear to me, including . . . my father and the life that he kept from his family."

What ensues is a meandering, peculiarly engrossing journey through the hidden histories of the Rips family and of Omaha, including brothels, bootleggers, Al Capone, race riots, murders, homeless millionaires, war, a woman who could fly and the true history of the Reuben sandwich. As fantastic as they sound, the threads of narrative are held together by a running meditation on the theories of the philosopher Emmanuel Levinas, Bible stories and Rips's own artful prose, which reconstructs his father from shards of memory as a complex man of greater depth and compassion than his friends or family ever imagined. With its multiple discoveries, The Face of a Naked Lady is as enjoyable as it is offbeat.

 

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