MADMAN ON A DRUM (Unlic. Invest-McKenzie-St, Paul, Minnesota-Cont) Ex
Housewright, David – 5th in series
St. Martin’s Minotaur, 2008, US Hardcover – ISBN: 9780312370817
First Sentence: They kidnapped Bobby Dunston’s daughter in the middle of a bright September afternoon off a city street that I had traveled safely maybe a thousand times when I was a kid.
Former St. Paul cop Rushmore McKenzie returned from the force in order to receive a $1M finders fee on embezzled funds. His friend, and investment manager, has increased his wealth five-fold. The daughter of his best friends, and of his heart, has been kidnapped.
The kidnapper is asking for $1M saying they can get it from McKenzie. Finding the kidnapper is not the end of the case, but the beginning of greater threat on the life of McKenzie and those to whom he is close.
For me, Housewright should be in the ranks of Rankin, Connelly, Craig, Parker and others. In some ways, I like his protagonists more than some of the others.
McKenzie is macho, yet flawed. His sense of humor lightens the story and can get the character into trouble. I was particularly taken with McKenzie’s explanation as to why he still puts his life at risk and helps people.
Housewright is skilled at including local flavor and history to his locations, explanations of the Minnesota justice system and a myriad of other details that are fascinating and instructive without ever intruding on or slowing down the plot, action and suspense of the story.
The story was gripping; one of those I started at 3 p.m. and finished at 1 a.m. because I couldn’t stop until I was done. The suspense built with each new twist. The violence can be brutal, but so are the bad guys. It was Housewright’s best book yet; an excellent read