COUNTDOWN: Mid-20th Century North American Crime
BOOK 93 (of 250)
My understanding is that this novel is on the auto-fiction side: apparently, the missing person in this novel represents Macdonald's missing father. That certainly adds an interesting dimension.
HOOK - 3: P.I. Lew Archer is hired by a lawyer to find a missing Galton family member. Given the auto-fiction element, I kept thinking perhaps that Macdonald, through Archer, was working through his own emotions, perhaps putting it all on paper to resolve it once and for all. Still, this is a typical crime novel opener: a person goes missing.
PACE - 3: Macdonald keeps the pages turning, but I've read half dozen or so of this author's novels, and this one seems more on the thoughtful side with a little bit less action.
PLOT - 4: A Galton family member simply drops out of sight. Gordon Sable (of Wellesly and Sable law offices) hires Archer to investigate. Sable's own wife is a drunk and a mess and Gordon feels a responsibility to the Galtons: "I can't have Mrs. Galton's last days darkened by scandal." Sable's wife is suspicious that something else is going on besides just a missing person. And she's right. There is a huge inheritance involved, and people may not be related to each other in the way they've been raised to think. Macdonald's plot is, as usual, on the complicated side, but the author is able to wrap up various elements.
CHARACTERS - 4: Of all the hard-boiled P.I.s, Archer might be the smartest, the most logical in thinking through cases. Still, he is strong and often threatening. Maria Galton, in her 70s, has heart problems and asthma and at first seems kind and forgiving, but is she just the opposite? Anthony, the Galton family's son, disappears at the same time $2,000 and some expensive jewels go missing. A mob is involved in some way: "Shoulders" Nelson, Pete Culligan, and others. The cast is very good.
ATMOSPHERE - 3: The story moves back and forth from Canada to California, but I didn't get a sense of any difference of environment. Throughout the story, there are drugs, booze, and hookers so we're in a dark world with secrets. In this outing, though, the focus is on complicated, ill-defined relationships.
SUMMARY - 3.4, a good read, but not among my favorite of Ross Macdonald's novels. "The Galton Case", however, has received much praise, perhaps because of its auto-fiction element.