This is my first of Patterson’s “Bookshots” reads, the short stories he has designed to deliver a quick, intense reading experience in one sitting. Patterson's new genre is designed to help those with busy lives to keep reading, providing a way to pass time waiting at an airport, in a doctor’s office or those few short hours between hitting the gym and heading out for an evening with friends at the local pub. The goal is to give the reader a quick satisfying experience, a shot of pure entertainment at a reasonable price. The books are marketed to be sold for less than five dollars each, well within the reach of most readers. It is what this new busy world needs. Not everyone has time for long leisurely reads these days.
This type of writing requires skills which are quite different from that of penning a novel. It is not easy to develop a good solid story and deliver it in about a hundred and fifty pages. It leaves the author little time or space for describing a context or developing characters yet still provide the reader with a satisfying reading experience. These small volumes are obviously fulfilling a need as they are flying off the shelves as quickly as they are published. For the most part, Patterson is partnering with other authors to produce these slim volumes, but in others he is the sole author.
In this one, readers are introduced to Mitchum, a young man who has been known simply by his last name since he was a child. Mitchum lives in Marlboro, a small quiet town in upstate New York. His regular job is delivering the newspapers in town with his loyal dog Bart Simpson, a job that keeps him in touch with everyone who lives there. But his unofficial role is that of private investigator, a role that helps him avoid thinking about the past, one littered with dead fiancées, missed opportunities and a messed up family. He has many relatives and they are scattered everywhere in this small town. They include his brother Nathanial, a drug dealer who has done time in the past.
Mitchum’s biggest disappointment was his failure to achieve his childhood dream of becoming a Navy Seal. He had started the course and was at the top of his class but couldn’t master the basic skill of swimming. After almost drowning in the Pacific he quit the course, a man who could fight and shoot but not swim well enough to qualify. During his time in the Navy, he had the opportunity to attend forensic and crime scene classes and has taken additional courses at the community college, so he has a good general understanding of the law. This background serves him well in his role as an investigator.
Mitchell is well liked in town and he enjoys helping others. His role often involves comforting older people rather than actually solving crimes and he stays away from the cheating and divorce cases. Still, he enjoys the work including being the person people turn to when they need help. The added benefit to this role is that he doesn’t have to prepare or document a criminal case, he can simply be where the action is and experience the satisfaction of being there for those who need him.
Mitchum swings into action when he learns that his favorite cousin, fourteen year old Bailey Mae is missing. As he tries to get information about her whereabouts, he learns she has recently been seen hanging out with Nate, his drug dealing brother and that has him worried. Then Mabel his favorite waitress at the local diner fails to appear for work and Bob and Francine Wilkes, an elderly couple, are found dead in their home, shot in the head. The quiet sleepy little town of Marlboro seems to have gone off the rails in a matter of days.
As Mitchum tries to find Bailey Mae and get a handle on whatever else is going on in town, he wonders if and how these events are connected. Has his drug dealing brother Nate seduced Bailey Mae into the world of drugs or are the new thugs in town trying to take over his brother’s established territory?
The “Bookshot" is definitely a different reading experience. Readers accustomed to richly crafted characters and time to become truly engaged and invested in a storyline may initially be disappointed. I did find the story interesting and I did like the character of Mitchum. The authors have dropped some hints that there might be additional books with the same character in the future and I would certainly move on to a second book if there is one. It will take me time to become accustomed to the “Bookshot Experience” but I definitely believe it has its place in the busy often fractured lives we live these days.