So glad Carella wasn't bumped off early on in the series as planned, or we wouldn't be here (in the series) right along side him feeling his pain and remembrance.
Widows gives us three lines of plot this time out. !) The main murder plot, 2) the Death of Carella's father , and 3) the plight of Eileen Burke's career path- and those involved. All three wrap up nicely in the finale, and this is a solid chapter in the 87th annals. On a positive note, I believe nearly all of the 87th main folks are present, at least somewhere in this book.!+1star
The main plot treads over common ground of sex, revenge, greed, and murder. Several deaths are attributed to an adulterous older man, apparently into younger blondes, and a poor relationship track record. McBain paints a graphic precursor to 50 Shades of Gray within some of the adult letters being used as evidence in this storyline. Being an older story, it felt shocking for shocking-sake, more vulgar than erotic, but paints the necessary picture. The resolution seems like a bar stool tale's punchline. And not very satisfying.
The Burke scenes feel heavy handed, redundant, and empty of feeling (for me). Much of the whining by Burke is understandable, given what has happening in previous books, but geez, just get out of police work already. "I don't what to have to shoot people (as a police officer chasing gun toting bad guys) but I won't go find an office job that requires no use of hand guns and stop being a cop." Much time is spent beating that drum to ill effect. Burke jumping over to a Hostage/ Negotiator, seems like the wrong move. Nearly all hostages are held as such by a ...(insert weapon of choice here, probably a gun.) And the Negotiator is the only one not carrying a weapon.
Trying to drag Kling into this mess, feels dirty, irresponsible, and overly harsh, especially given the abrupt result in the latter chapter. Can't say I am a fan of Burke at this point.
And poor Steve, losing his Dad to gun violence for money for crack, this hurts. McBain does a solid job of covering all the emotional bases, while keeping Carella true to form. Piling on family drama of a later term pregant sister, her dead beat husband, their kids, etc., the effects of the father's death on everyone is deftly handled. Teddy is present with sage questions to prompt Steve's path.
I thought, intentionally so, that the title was about those widows of the violence begat in this story, then McBain throws in a lame poker-style card game named the same thing. Weird ending note for me.
Good story overall, with a couple of long winded segments, overly vulgar/erotic letters among victims, and common as sunshine crimes to solve makes this another worthwhile read.
Recommend (in line with the series) to best effect.
Thanks for reading.