This second Raylan Givens novel is not quite as good as the first, but crime novel fans and Justified fans will find enough excitement--and enough Raylan--to satisfy them both.
Harry Arno and Joyce are back again, only this time Harry's not on the lam, but instead is kidnapped by a thug, a semi-thug and a hustler. As usual, Leonard is very good at revealing bit by bit precisely how vicious the bad guys are, allowing the reader to play the game “Whose the Worst Psychopath?” all the way to the end of the book. This time the bad guys have an interesting and attractive accomplice: a psychic, the Reverend Dawn Navarro. It is difficult to tell whether Dawn is a lucky guesser, a real psychic, just a plain old fashioned liar, or maybe a little bit of all three. This too is an engaging question for the reader continually to ponder.
While reading this book, I found myself admiring another instance of just what a pro Leonard can be. At the end of chapter eighteen, the thug and the semi-thug drive off to perpetrate another crime, leaving the hustler in his home guarding the kidnapped Harry. Raylan hesitates: should he follow the thugs in the car or instead should he stay and check out what he believes to be an unguarded house? Chapter nineteen shifts to the inside of the house, and for the bulk of it the reader remains in suspense, not only about what Raylan might do when he too gets there, but also about whether he is going there at all, and still at the same he continues to wonder what bad things the thugs may be doing right now and whether Raylan might really be following them instead. It is plot construction like this that furrows the reader's brow and makes his heart beat a little faster, and it is very fine plot construction indeed, the kind that is worthy of a pro.
(A note for Justified fans: the series uses the plot of Riding the Rap for “The Fixer” (3rd episode, 1st season), and a modified version of the Reverend Dawn appears as Eve Munro, psychic wife of fugitive Drew Thompson, in “Truth or Consequences” and “Outlaw” (3rd and 8th episodes, 4th season). In each case, although the TV version is enjoyable, the novel make better use of the material.)