Look, I get it: I’m not your typical superhero. I don’t leap tall buildings, I’m not a billionaire playboy, and I didn’t get bitten by a radioactive spider. Plus, I don’t wear tights. Where the heck would I keep my gun?
But don’t get it twisted: I, private detective Truman Lord, am still very much a superhero. If my gun doesn’t get you, my powers surely will. I’m thinking about using that as my catchphrase. Don’t try to steal it. I copyright my stuff.
When Eileen hired me to stop a former lover from blackmailing her, I thought it would be a simple matter of using sweet reason to persuade him to stop. I call my right fist “sweet”; my left one is “reason.” But, when people started turning up dead and supervillains came out of the woodwork, I was soon investigating a murder case where I was the next target. Someone wanted me dead.
I hoped to foil their objective. “Foil" is superhero and detective-speak for “punch them in the face.”
I'm a big fan of Darius Brasher's THE OMEGA SUPERHERO books, though they tended to get a little dark for my tastes, so I decided to check out his other superhero series.
THE SUPERHERO DETECTIVE is a work which reflects its title in that it's about a hydrokinetic private eye who just so happens to work as a licensed hero in-between his career as a gumshoe. I liked Truman Lord during his guest appearance in SENTINELS and was eager to get into his series. So, what did I think? I really liked it.
SUPERHERO DETECTIVE FOR HIRE follows Truman Lord as he's hired by a middle aged academic being blackmailed by her much younger lover. Said lover has the ability to create 3-dimensional illusions of the events he's experienced as well as record them on film. It turns out the young man has made an enormously profitable living blackmailing older rich women he's sleeping with. Unfortunately, he crosses the wrong person during Truman's investigation and it swiftly becomes a case where the bodies begin piling up.
The book is really good with a buffet of sex, lies, superpowers, and murder. If I have any complaints, it's the fact the book is about 80% detective noir and 20% superhero. A more evenly distributed balance between the capes and private detective work would have been appreciated. Despite this, I had a lot of fun with the characters and the seediness of Truman's investigations.
Truman is a great protagonist and while cynical deadpan snarkers are nothing new in the detective genre, I found him to be a likable Harry Dresden-esque figure. Certainly, I'm looking forward to picking up more volumes of his series.
Apparently a spinoff of another of the author's superhero series, this was an enjoyable, moderately interesting, low-stakes story. It's light on action, heavy on the process of private detectiving. The main character and narrator is well-developed with a complex morality that makes him a hero, despite factors that could easily drag him into gray zones. Of course, he's a complete pig when it comes to women, at least in his constant evaluations of their appearance, although his outward actions are generally honorable, and the setting is awfully misogynistic; almost every woman shown is a receptionist or secretary or a sex kitten unsatisfied by her wealthy older husband. It's like a 1950s comic book social landscape only partially updated for the 21st century.
I appreciated that it was the most adult of the few superhero-based novels I have read to date, which tend to skew towards YA sensibilities even if intended for an adult audience. This is a feature of the source material, but here the author crafts a concept that matures the subgenre somewhat.
The voice of the hardboiled detective was maintained well throughout the story. The touches of humour were nice, usually in the form of the main character's self-deprecation. Although superpowers were not a huge part of the story, I liked the creative uses of the MC's hydrokinetic abilities.
Amazon sales rank (Feb 2021; tracking for my Kindle Unlimited trial books, just for fun) Best Sellers Rank: #205,782 in Kindle Store Best sub-rank: #928 in Contemporary Fantasy Fiction
Two chapters in and every female character is described as a potential sexual partner. The protagonist can't even refer to a woman without ruminating on her looks. If this was satire, I'd say it was overblown, but it is not.
The author struggles with grammar. His MC seems to think he has it mastered though. Ha.
Brasher also likes to quote real people in his fantasy, either mashing the quotes and/or misattributing them. Is it too hard a thing to use Google these days?
On the plus side, the tone is pleasant - a blending of comedy and noir. The concept is interesting and the power-sets seem modest enough to make any action-scenes relatable, assuming there was some action past the point at which I quit.
If you don't mind a misogynistic MC and a pretentious author, I can see some promise here.
Read an excerpt of this from the author's other series first book, Caped. And on the promise of that excerpt, I bought(!) this book and started reading it.
And, it pretty much lived up to my self-aggrandized hype. I'm sure Titus would agree.
Mild spoiler: A university president is being blackmailed by her lover, and she hires Titus, a superpowered private detective, to put an end to the blackmail without alerting her husband.
Titus is a character, for sure, and I don't just mean that as a person in a story. He is full of himself, mostly with reason. He's okay with being slightly abrasive toward people. One never knows what will break off/out of someone and reveal something useful.
Very satisfying read, and I definitely want to continue the series. Soon, dear readers, soon!
Got this book after going down a rabbit hold of Kindle recommendations... Read one superhero book and suddenly you are dog piled with 20 more as suggestions. Overall the book was good. I felt like the author was trying just a little too hard with the protagonist's throw back to 1940's gumshoe detective crossed with sarcastic wise guy. But I love a good mystery and this delivered a one that I found enjoyable. After about halfway through the book, the protagonist had grown on me and I had accepted his personality. Overall, it was an enjoyable read and I plan on picking up the sequel.
Nope. An annoying MC with a sense of humor only he appreciates and I'm not even going to get into his leery obsession with women.
I've read better superhero books this year.
Below is an example of the author's love of 'I' which happens way too much. Almost as if he hired an elementary school student to write some scenes.
"I put the gun back into the desk drawer I had taken it out off. I picked up the glass bowl holding the depleted water. I took it to the bathroom at the end of the hall to refill it."
What a fun book. You don't have to like fantasy or superhero stories to like our hero Truman Lord. I don't much like most superhero books and have been pleasantly surprised with Darius Brasher's Omega Superhero series and now this enjoyable fast read.
Quite an enjoyable read. However, I kept thinking the main character sounded very familiar. Then I remembered! I think it was a detective series by I believe a writer named Donald Westlake. Not sure, and really doesn't matter😀 This one is good enough to stand alone, and you should definitely read it.
I liked this one. The snarky comments and dialogue were entertaining. It would be nice if authors who wrote about guns actually knew something about them. However that is probably to much to wish for.
Not for me Detective noir with a wise-cracking detective. The internal dialog was just too corny. While I can deal with some of it, the amount was just too much and too horrible. Paraphrasing:
I read the omega superhero series first and found this to be a light read with more witty dialogs. It's not as serious and if you are looking for something where you do not want to think too much, this is perfect.
I think this quote from the homicide detective, Glenn Pearson, pretty well sums up my thoughts. “Though you’re almost as good as you think you are, you’re nowhere near as funny as you think you are.”
Would recommend this book to anyone. A detective series with super hero's. Definitely not your typical super hero's book. Cannot wait to read the next book
Dud. This book is riddled cliches. A reader could play cliche bingo. 94% you've seen elsewhere. The Super hero parts of the story are good. But, it feels like you have to drag thru a swamp of derivative material to get to it.
Thoughtful literature? Nope. But reasonably amusing. The viewpoint character is very much NOT the Modern Sensitive Male(tm) that has become the norm in urban fantasy. He is, however, exceedingly honest in sharing his unfiltered thoughts with the reader, and has a personal code to which he adheres, even when it conflicts with professional or societal expectations.
I laughed. I cringed. I groaned. I chuckled. I read it all the way through, and was generally entertained. Not your standard superhero story, not your standard UF - but an interesting change of pace. Sometimes you just want some Fritos, instead of the fancy tortilla chips.
With a rather crazy sense of humor, the main character stumbles a bit through an investigation in a world with metahumans as well as blackmailers. Lots of fun & a pretty good mystery.