I honestly didn't know what to expect when I started to read this book. A completely new to me author, this is not Martin Stewart's first fiction rodeo, but Double Proof is his first adult crime fiction novel. Now I love discovering new authors, and new characters, and it is safe to say that, with Robbie Gould, Polygon have hit onto a real winner. A most disagreeable, and reluctant, private investigator, of sorts, he is a whole lot of fun - and a whole lot of trouble for the daft idiots who thought it was a good idea to go and abduct Albie Dalziel.
This book had me from the start. It had a dry, sardonic, humour which really hit the right notes for me and that good old Scottish sarcasm that I absolutely love. It's a classic crime novel - organised crime, some very 'out of town' gangsters, and whole lot of threat - and yet with a very modern edge. The victim in this case is a social media influencer - hard to be sympathetic to influencers now isn't it 😉 - but is also part of the famous Dalziel family, the makers of some of Scotland's finest Whisky's, including the infamous, 'Double Proof' whisky, once thought lost and now subject of an ownership claim. But could this whisky, as valuable as it may be, be the root cause of Albie's abduction, or is there something darker in play?
Well, thankfully for Albie's mother, and us readers, Robbie Gould is on the case. Eventually. It's fair to say that he is not initially a keen participant in this investigation, and the more we learn about him, the more understandable his reluctance, and occasional petulance, is. Former journalist and now author, Gould is a man with a reputation. Having previously been caught up in a high profile missing person case he comes with some 'baggage' but that is part of what makes him such a compelling and enjoyable character. He is sarcastic, cynical and has an amazing knack of getting under people's skin, including that of the people who have hired him to find Albie. But I really liked him. When he gets into the case he is like a dog with a bone and so much about his personality and behaviour really made me chuckle. He does have a gift, just perhaps not the one that earned him the moniker of 'Robbie the Ghoul'. He ends up in a world of trouble and seemingly has more lives than a cat, but I was very happy to go on the journey with him. And what a journey it is.
This is a kind of ticking clock case in that there is a finite deadline in which to save Albie - an impending ransome demand that the family are not able to meet. But this is no straightforward case and with a little bit of deception and misdirection on the author's part, there is far more going on than first meets the eye. Gould ticks off the suspects one by one, slowly uncovering more evidence which ends up leading him in a completely different direction. The flow of this story is perhaps as disorganised as Gould's note making, but, strangely, it actually works really well. There is plenty of tension, and behind the humour, a whole lot of underlying threat. Some of the scenes in which Gould is in greatest peril actually turned into some of the funniest in the book, his ability to get out of trouble actually very amusing, if not without injury to be poor man - plenty of injury in fact.
The pacing of this book was spot on and I actually finished in in one afternoon and evening. I'm definitely hoping this is just the first outing for Robbie Gould. he's not the most conventional investigator out there, but he's a whole lot of fun. If you like a little witty tartan noir, this could well be the right book for you.