As many of his fans know, Dick Francis passed away in February 2010. He was a force in mystery novels all set in some way in the English horse riding community publishing one novel a year until his wife's death in 2000. She helped him research his novels. In his obituary, the New York Times reported that Dick Francis thought he would never write another book again, but in 2006 he came out with a new Sid Halley novel, in which his son Felix Francis helped with the research. Thereafter Dick and Felix collaborated on several novels. Last year's dual Francis offering - Crossfire - published after Dick Francis's death was also a collaborative entry.
Although Dick Francis’s early novels were firmly set in the horse riding world of England, his later novels, while set in that world, were often about other topics. Nevertheless, they all had an innate feel of that horse riding world and the villains were also part of that world. When you opened a Francis novel, the hero usually was in some awful predicament and you felt it in your gut. There was a ratcheting up of suspense. Time was always ticking and eventually the main character had to overcome his foes, usually with wit and force of arms. In the prior collaborative efforts, the novels did not seem to have that same feel for the horse track or that suspense.
This new novel, Gamble, is Felix Francis first solo effort in the mystery genre that his father so skillfully charted. Although Francis still lacks that Dick Francis touch around the track, it’s a solid overall effort and does have a lot more suspense.
Foxy Foxton, now known as Nick Foxton, was a former jockey, who has gone into financial advising. He works, with Herb Kovak, at Lyall & Black, a financial advising firm. He is standing next to Herb Kovak at the track, when an unknown gunman kills Kovak in cold blood. Surprisingly appointed as Kovak's executor, Foxton soon learns that Kovak was involved in some kind of internet scam involving gambling.
Later he goes to the track to meet with Bobby Searle, a client of the firm, who demands to have his financial portfolio sold immediately to pay off a 100,000 pound debt. When Foxton cannot convert the investments into hard currency fast enough, Searle is nearly killed by a hit and run driver.
Later yet, Foxton is approached by Colonel Jolyon Roberts, a client of the firm, to investigate a Bulgarian investment his family trust has made in the amount of 5,000,000 pounds. It seems that Roberts nephew visited the site where houses and a factory were supposed to be built and found nothing there. When Foxton finds out that something is fishy about that investment and conveys the information to Roberts and tells Roberts to talk to Lyall & Black, Roberts also ends up dead under suspicious circumstances. Suspicious to Foxton.
Soon Foxton finds himself running for his life from the hired gunman who killed Kovak, and like all good Francis heroes he resorts to his wit and fists to defeat this villain and the ones who hired him. He eventually puts the pieces together as to who wanted Kovak dead and solves the mystery of the real bad guys.
Francis only miscue, if it is one, is that when his hero rides a horse in one scene, there is no connection between rider and horse as we would have found in a Dick Francis novel. It’s a minor issue in an overall good effort.