This is the second book I read by Harrison (first was Manhattan Nocturne), and it did not disappoint. I do not the patience for crappy, choppy writing of many contemporary mystery writers, as well as their two-dimensional characters. This was a breath of fresh air for me. Harrison is a fantastic storyteller!!! I'm a big fan of his writing style.
Of course, this book has its flaws, too. We'll get into that in a bit.
The characters: Most of the characters in the novel were fleshed out and really well written.
Judith, the materialistic trophy wife was still well described in the opening. Harrison took the marriages between the middle aged corporate husband and the never satisfied wife and put it perfectly it words.
The dialogues between Bill Wyeth and Dan Tuthill was SO amusing. It's exactly how I imagined middle aged dude bros would sound like over a lunch conversation at a steakhouse.
Harrison definitely introduced some intriguing characters early on in the story, like Ha, the old Chinese man.
The plot: It was engaging, that’s for sure. The pacing was great; I didn't feel like the story dragged.
I have the hardcover edition of the novel, and when I read the excerpt "before long, he's inextricably ensnared in Rainey's particular obsessions, which involve a Chilean businessman who feels he's been swindled, an old farmer frozen dead to a bulldozer, an outrageous black owner of a downtown hip-hop club, and a fourteen year old English girl," it all sounded WAY too ridiculous to me. If not for the reviews I read on Goodreads beforehand, I wouldn't have read the book.
The plot, as crazy as it is, works I guess.
The cons: I don't know how realistic the initial incident was. I don't want to get into it and give any spoilers, but I'm pretty that would not happen in real life.
Bill is a pretty flawed protagonist. It makes no sense to me why he would get into Jay Rainey's whole mess. Or how, as a grown man (with some common sense, I presume) and an EXPERIENCED lawyer, he could possibly agree to Allison's favour.
Jay- his motivation for the real estate transaction doesn't make sense to me. Again, I won't get into it, but if you've read the book and want to discuss, I'll be right here.
The thing that bother me the most- what goes on in the Havana Room is so, so unrealistic. But it definitely piqued my curiosity for 60% of the book.
Overall, I was thoroughly entertained, and as I've mentioned, I appreciate the writing. I guess that meets the purpose of mystery novels. Would recommend!