First Sentence: Sometimes the water was glassy and still, and the boat sat on it like a piece of paper on a flat table.
Grace MacBride, partner in Monkeewrench, finally takes a break, sheds her protective clothing and goes sailing with the friend only to end up saving him from having his throat slit by killing the two assassins instead. Grace’s friends, homicide detectives Leo Magozzi and Gino Rolseth are faced with a string of execution murders. Their investigation leads them to uncover a chain of such murders in cities around the country. The motive puts the Monkeywrench gang directly in the target and fighting to stay alive.
The first pages of a book are so important to a reader and Tracy’s descriptive opening provides a perfect introduction to the books characters, even those not present in the opening scene. We are even introduced to a metamorphosed Grace with an understanding as to how such a change transpired.
Between the police and the Monkeywrench gang, Tracy has established a wonderfully eclectic group of characters that work well together and balance each others strengths and weaknesses, including some of the most basic phobias. Tracy’s dialogue takes you from suspense to humor, providing a well-needed balance.
Tracy’s wonderfully evocative descriptions give a real strength to the story. They are the type of descriptions you don’t just read, you savor. Some you allow to build and form in your mind’s eye for their lyricism and inclusion of mysticism.
There are flaws, however. The character of plot’s villains were too easily set up to be the villains and too stereotypical. There was an unfortunate phrase which kept being used and should have been eliminated. The story had excellent suspense that ratcheted up with each chapter but the ending fell off the cliff. For a group of seemingly brilliant individuals, there was a major too-stupid-to-live event that was nearly unforgivable. The final climatic scene seemed abrupt, almost as though they weren’t certain how to write the dramatic action scene and suddenly, there we are; all done. Even though the epilogue was a good confirmation, it really wasn’t a necessary one, which is too bad. Rather than being a didn’t-see-that-coming revelation, it was I-knew-that confirmation.
“Off The Grid” is a good read. It certainly kept me turning the pages. Its strengths are definitely the characters, dialogue and descriptions. And although there were problems, I was entertained and would put it at the level of a good Sunday or airplane read.
OFF THE GRID (Police Proc/Unl Invest-The Monkeywrench Gang/Det.s Magozzi and Rolseth-Florida/Minnesota-Contemporary – Good
Tracy, P.J. – 6th in series
Putnam, 2012