This sixth book in Valin’s Harry Stoner series is as good as the fifth, and the fifth is one of my favorite mystery novels of all time. In some ways it is very different from elder brother, for Life’s Work concerns a professional football in Cincinnati, whereas Natural Causes, the earlier book, dealt with the writing and production of a daytime soap opera in Hollywood. Yet each books reveals the shabbiness that lies beneath a glamorous business: the greed and ambition that drives it, the vices that infect it, the characteristic personalities of the talented—and often haunted--men and women who make it what it is. Hollywood is more about cocaine and lies, football more about steroids and rage, but both worlds—when you delve beneath the surface—betray layers of duplicity, violence, and fear.
The whole thing starts as a missing person’s case. Hugh Petrie, CEO of the Cincinnati Cougars, wants Harry Stoner to locate Billy Parks, who didn’t show up for training camp one day and hasn’t been seen since. Soon Stoner teams up—well, sort of—with Billy’s good friend Otto Bluerock, official football has-been and possibly the angriest man alive, to find the missing football star. They tear up the local bars, gyms and jails (well Otto does, anyway) and soon Stoner is enveloped in a bizarre stew of steroid trafficking, prostitution, the abuse of women, and religious fanaticism. Meanwhile, Billy eludes them. But rage and violence are crucial to football, Billy and Otto’s “life’s work,” and Stoner senses that—given the damaged lives he sees around him—murder is just a matter of time.
Read it. It is one of the lost classics of the hard-boiled genre.