This seventh Harry Stoner detective adventure is not quite as good as the last two. That’s okay, though: last two—Natural Causes (1983) and Life’s Work (1986) were masterpieces of the genre. Fire Lake (1987) is just a damn fine novel.
Actually—although there is a murder and a mystery included—it seems at first more like a suspense thriller, probably because the mess Cincinnati’s Harry Stoner finds himself in has nothing to do with his being a private detective. He receives a call late at night telling him that someone signed in under his name at the Encantada Motel out on Wooster Pike, and that this someone was beaten up and then tried to kill himself by taking some pills. So, Harry leaves his cozy Clifton apartment and soon discovers that “AKA Harry Stoner’ is somebody he knows: guitar wizard and heroin addict “Lonnie Jack” Jackowski, who Stoner once roomed with in college. Harry brings Lonnie home and cleans him up, and is glad to do it, for Lonnie Jack brings back memories of the ‘60s, of cool concerts at the “Black Dome” (and a few bad junkie memories too). But Lonnie disappears while Stoner is off on an errand, and soon his life is turned upside down when a bunch of very bad men—and one bad-news cop as well, come looking for him, convinced he’s ripped them off for Lonnie’s big score.
There are a lot of exciting scenes of violence, some grim evocations of junkie despair, and a few nice character sketches as well. And the mystery is a good one, when it comes, and the murderer is a suprise. But perhaps the best thing about the novel for me—who is a huge Harry Stoner fan—is that Fire Lake is the first Harry Stoner book since The Lime Pit (1980) that features a real honest-to-god woman, instead of the flower children, graduates from Nymphet U. and straight-up bimbos that customarily drift through his adventures. No, Lonnie Jack’s ex-wife Karen is the real thing, and Stoner’s relationship with her is the highlight of the book.
The rest of the novel is very good too, and you mystery fans should read it. But read Natural Causes and Life’s Work first.