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DKA File #2

Final Notice

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Very good in a near fine dust jacket. (some spine slant, literary agent's sticker on front endpaper, one short closed tear t Hardcover first edition - New Random House,, (1973.). Hardcover first edition -. Very good in a near fine dust jacket. (some spine slant, literary agent's sticker on front endpaper, one short closed tear to dj, original price of 4.95 still present.). First printing. The second DKA File novel, 'starring the detectives of Daniel Kearny Associates, skip tracers.' Oakland, California setting. 182 pp.

182 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1973

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About the author

Joe Gores

78 books33 followers
Joe Gores (1931-2011) was the author of the acclaimed DKA series of street-level crime and detection, as well as the stunning suspense novels Dead Man and Menaced Assassin.

He served in the U.S. Army - writing biographies of generals at the Pentagon - was educated at the University of Notre Dame and Stanford, and spent twelve years as a San Francisco private investigator. The author of dozens of novels, screenplays, and television scripts, he won three Edgar Allan Poe Awards and Japan's Maltese Falcon Award.

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5 stars
18 (16%)
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51 (47%)
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36 (33%)
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Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Damo.
480 reviews72 followers
October 23, 2022
Final Notice is the second book in the DKA Files, it follows almost directly on from Dead Skip and continues a wonderfully entertaining series of hardboiled PI detective novels. In much the same way Ed McBain’s 87th Precinct books artfully depicted policing, the DKA Files books cover the private investigator role in the 1970s.

Lovers of the ins and outs of the subtle art of deception while tracking down petty crims will definitely get a kick out of this. DKA stands for Dan Kearny Associates and is a detective agency that specialises in car repossessions and tracking down skip-traces. Final Notice is full of clever cons and scams designed to gather the information required to track down their delinquent quarry.

The dedication, excitement and competition between agents is particularly emphasised in the course of the various jobs the agents perform as can be seen as Larry Ballard prepares to commandeer a repo’d Cadillac.

“This was it. That always intense excitement, almost pure joy, when you faced the moment of action. Get out hot wire and pop keys. Lock up the Plymouth. Walk casually, as casually as the hard-eyed man had walked. No need for window picks, since the top was down.”

Coming down off the high of jumping in the car and simply taking off, Ballard is stunned to find a comic book sitting on the seat next him containing a number of $100 bills stuffed between the pages. By unwittingly taking the car plus money he places the company in the middle of a mob pay-off. The bank that employed DKA to perform the repossession quickly orders the Caddy be returned to the former owner which DKA obediently do.

It would have all ended there, but then a member of staff is savagely beaten and it becomes obvious the attacker is a hit man working for Padilla Trucking, a known mob front. It happened right outside the agency office and, even more disturbing, the true target was Kearney himself. From this point on it becomes personal and Dan Kearny and his people become determined to find out what's going on and, perhaps, get some revenge.

This book was written in the 1970s and comes across as very typical for the time. It’s a nice mix of interesting detective work coupled with a likable group of individually unique characters making it a fresh detective story. In fact, one of the stronger points of the book is the ensemble cast that makes up the agency. We get a complete picture of the assets of each of the DKA employees and the way they interact with each other. Gores does an outstanding job of bringing each and every one of them to life.

This is a hardboiled detective novel that contains plenty of action sequences to keep the entertainment level high with the mood occasionally lifted by some light-hearted interaction between the DKA agents. As far as private investigator series go, I've found this remains one of the freshest and most enjoyable I’ve read in recent times.
Profile Image for Wayne Zurl.
Author 41 books106 followers
March 18, 2015
FINAL NOTICE by Joe Gores . . .

The last book I reviewed was FINAL NOTICE by Jonathan Valin. The title is as far as the similarity goes. Valin’s Harry Stoner is a “lone wolf” private eye while Joe Gores writes about a group of organized company investigators, more like the commonly seen Pinkerton or Burns agency private cops. In this case they work for Dan Kearny Associates.

The story begins with one of Kearny’s operatives repossessing a snazzy Caddy convertible. The next important thing is when one of the more senior PIs gets tuned up seriously by a pair of mobbed-up hoods. As in any good mystery, much of what we see is not even close to what it really is. Then, toss in lots of character development with the regular employees of DKA so we get a better incite to their personalities and FINAL NOTICE was a pretty good 1970s PI story.

After the beating, the plot and solution gets pretty complicated. I like Gores’ imagination and how he writes his DKA File Novels as PI procedurals, much like Joe Wambaugh writes his LAPD police procedurals. Not so much in the case of FINAL NOTICE, but generally, there are various incidents common to the everyday life of real private investigators, car repossessions and some more mundane tasks, being in the majority, and how some of them all wrap up into a relative bundle and carry on into the final problem and solution.
Profile Image for Daniel Sevitt.
1,426 reviews137 followers
May 11, 2019
Really solid PI story based again around Dan Kearney’s repo agency. There’s some fairly convoluted chicanery from the bad guys but it’s nothing our heroes can’t run done with some solid detecting and keen thinking.

There was a little too much racism and misogyny for today’s readers, but the plotting is solid and the pacing impressive.
Profile Image for Lee.
927 reviews37 followers
November 3, 2019
This series has to be one of the better noir series fron the '70's. Gores lean and direct prose, is what it feels like reading a Hammett tale 40 years later.
Profile Image for Ward.
252 reviews5 followers
January 17, 2019
3.5 stars, a good procedural and touring of the San Francisco Bay Area.
Profile Image for Christopher Taylor.
Author 10 books78 followers
February 10, 2020
An enjoyable read, shorter than the first DKA book.

These books are kind of a time capsule, taking you back to the early 70s with its cultural movements and attitudes. For those easily offended by language, be aware that there are some racist and sexist statements and words because this is meant to be a realistic book with real people using real language from the time.

Final Notice starts with a repossession, the primary work of the Dan Kearny Associates agency, and rapidly becomes a fight for the life of the agents against organized crime which, while it has no official presence in San Francisco still has its tentacles active there.

The mystery is incredibly complex, and yet not as satisfying as it ought to be, and while the personalities and characters are interesting, the story wasn't as effective this time around.
Profile Image for Karen.
2,054 reviews43 followers
February 23, 2011
Another interesting read about car repo in San Francisco.
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews

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