Absolutely Amazing!
I have now read books One and Two, and if One was wonderful, Two was glorious. This author is a real find. No, that's a tad condescending. I will be forever grateful to myself for finding this author; not hidden away, but in no way highlighted or calling attention to himself. Just "The luck of the Kindle!" But, quite seriously, this man is WAY up there, with the best of the best, the Sherlock Holmes books, the Woman With The Dragon Tattoo books, John Irving, the best of John Grisham, Gillian Flynn. He is brilliant, his stories are complex in the best possible way, he is a writer working a genre for all it's worth, yet with the full use of his highly unusual, and astonishing gifts of insight, empathy, humanity and love. The characters, particularly McCabe, of course, are ALL distinct, layered, flawed, human, worthy of our attention, and are all fascinating unto themselves, not just as cogs moving the machine forward. I feel like, I don't know, maybe the world could be okay, reading a book of this quality. I know that's goofy. But, be it crime fiction, "mere" fiction, or any other labels and generalities one might make about works of art, that is what this book is; a work of art. And, art, created by a true artist, not only engages us, but changes us. I'm just grateful that this author, who is clearly brilliant enough to have succeeded at any number of high-paying professions, chose, instead, to be a story-teller. A profession of the heart and soul, not of the reasoning mind and the expanding bank balance (although some authors become deliciously wealthy, and may that be the case here).Just a couple of personal notes; the book is elegant. Its architecture is classic, it's design utterly intentional and seemingly effortless. Which takes a great deal of effort. I know that "elegant" is an odd word to use for a crime novel involving multiple "pithings', but none-other will do. Also, as a gay man, I very much appreciate the authors inclusion of gay people among his characters; sometimes because they fit the narrative, and sometimes because the world also includes, among its characters, gay people. The author's lack of condescension, and his avoidance of the sensational, regarding gay characters, adds a lovely thread to this masterly tapestry - a thread too often left unchosen or dyed far too garish a color. I shall now immediately begin reading book Three, just as I immediately began book Two after book One, creating in my mind a single, singular, highly marvelous and engaging experience. Onward!