Thanks to NetGalley for an e-arc in exchange for an honest review.
The Bezzle is the second book in the Martin Hench series. Hench is a forensic accountant, helping companies find missing money. He makes enough money to live comfortably on, and is able to do his own side work. After he upsets some of the ultra-wealthy, he becomes involves a decade long endeavour to help a friend, and take down the wealthy who are using the privatized prison system as a personal playground and mark.
I always go in to a Doctorow book expecting to learn something. I’m not American, so this time around I learned all about privatized prison systems in American and how they’re really just a big ol’ money making machine. I actually had to go and research a lot of the things that were mentioned in the book because I kept thinking, “No, no. This is made up to make the book more interesting. To make the villains seem worse. That can’t actually be true.” And every damn time, it was true. It was upsetting. And I think that’s what made me love this book so much more. Somehow Doctorow made an exciting, interesting, and funny book, all while showcasing private prisons and the problems they have.
There’s something about the way Doctorow writes as well. Some of it feels like it should be info dumps, there’s long sections explaining different systems, or cryptocurrency, or whatever, and it shouldn’t feel as interesting as it is. He makes what could be dry info dumps interesting. Maybe it’s the character of Hench, there’s the perfect amount of sass in this character while talking about it all, or maybe it’s just how accessible all the writing is, but it keeps me engaged even when it’s not something I might be interested in learning or understanding.
I mentioned that it was a funny book. The friendships that Hench has, the shenanigans at the start of the book, it was hilarious. The Bezzle manages to take some really unsettling topics about prisons, and add in just the right amount of humour to balance it all out. It doesn’t make light of what’s going on in the story, or take away from the real-life situations it references, but it uses that kind of black humour that works to push through. I know that kind of humour doesn’t work for everyone, but I found it so well done in The Bezzle.
All in all, I can’t recommend this book enough. I can’t recommend Cory Doctorow enough. And as much as I enjoyed Red Team Blues, you don’t need to read it before The Bezzle if you click more with the synopsis of this one. They use the same character, but they do work as standalone books. You should read both, but if you want to start with The Bezzle, it won’t hurt your reading experience.