'Dex Territory' is a deft blend of a hard-boiled Mickey Spillane detective story set against a background of spandex-clad superheroes gone wild after being tricked into a drug-induced big Brawl downtown.
Rick O’Shea, the protagonist, tells his own story (in the 1st person voice) of how, as a cop, he set about the thankless job of exonerating his Dex friends and bringing the evil parties to justice, even if the authorities would rather he just do it all as quietly as possible and then disappear. His commentary on the people and events that cross his path unfolds with a wry sense of the absurd and the comic that had me laughing and smiling out loud throughout. And seriously, I’m not even a fan of the detective genre, yet I enjoyed this homage to all its familiar elements. It also has some of the tone of Hellboy, and I’d argue surpasses the banter and violent high jinks of such crime fiction as J. A. Konrath’s ‘Jack Daniels’ novels.
The plot moves along fast as O’Shea, recovering from multiple injuries, unravels the multiple setups and deceptions he encounters on the case. The characters all come to us through him, through his observation, interaction, and dialog. They confront, lie to, betray, drink with, walk out on, confide in, drown their sorrows with, make ultimatums to, and joke with – O’Shea, much to his chagrin, resignation, and occasional good grace.
The superhero angle works fine, though some genre purists may take it amiss. Their function is to be the framed innocents who Rick works to clear. It works well here, and they add more hilarious complications to O’Shea’s already complicated life.
'Dex Territory' is well worth your time even if you aren’t a fan of detective fiction.