A powerful new drug ushers in deaths on the street.
In the late 1970’s, Colorado Springs doesn’t see many drug overdoses; the Mexican brown heroin used by most on the street is rendered relatively weak given the way dealers cut it. When in a matter of days three different people suddenly die of overdoses, it is clear that something has changed. Detectives Joe Kenda and Lee Wilson start looking into what’s happening on the street, and for them it is personal….one of those who OD’d was the brother of Lee’s wife, M.E. Maggie Medina. An anesthesiologist at Springs General Hospital, unpopular with most who work with him given his nasty disposition and addicted to opiates himself, has started providing a powerful new synthetic opiate known as fentanyl to Lula Lopez, his occasional sexual partner who uses and deals drugs. As she cuts the much cheaper fentanyl into the Mexican brown she gets from family connections within the powerful Hinojosa cartel network, users die. For the cartel, this is just plain bad for business, but they don’t know which of their dealers is responsible….and decide to start getting rid of them one by one until the problem is resolved. Kenda and Wilson have a two-pronged problem, with dead bodies being the common denominator. Can they identify who is supplying and distributing this powerful and deadly new drug and stop the needless deaths?
First Do No Harm is the second novel featuring partners Kenda and Wilson by author and former homicide detective Joe Kenda, known to many as the star of the Investigation Discovery channel true-crime series Homicide Hunter: Lt. Joe Kenda. Full disclosure: I have never seen (nor, to be honest, heard about) the series, and have not read the first book in the series. Not having the benefit of those sources of background information may have affected my perspective on the book at hand. The premise is fascinating, looking at the origins of fentanyl leaving the hospital setting for which it was intended and infiltrating the street market, the precursor to today’s full blown epidemic, and the author clearly knows the territory. I had a difficult time getting into the novel; it is written in the first person narrative, and there was little information given to me as a reader about the character (which is perhaps a result of not having seen or read the author’s preceding show and books). The writing for me seemed a bit clunky, which detracted from my overall enjoyment of the story at hand. I give the book solid marks for an interesting plot and a clear eye for the world of law enforcement and its battle against drug dealers. Fans of the author’s true crime show will likely want to check out this latest work, and readers of authors like John E. Douglas, Bruce Robert Coffin and Marc Cameron may want to give it a try as well. Thank you to NetGalley and Blackstone Publishing for allowing me early access to a copy of First Do No Harm.