The hero of this book is a hard-boiled detective from the noir crime genre. The book is pervaded by cynicism, fatalism and moral ambiguity. Also sex. The hero’s name, Wolinski, makes me think the author has probably invested him with a bit of his own personality. He is a vigilante cop with no time or patience for doing things the accepted way. The world he inhabits is full of completely despicable, downright evil jerks and psychopaths who can be gunned down mercilessly without any moral compunction.
The narrative flickers back and forth between first and third person. This allows the reader to get an idea of how Wolinski looks when viewed objectively, and how he looks subjectively to himself. Subjectively he is extremely clever, relentless and always in the right. He is constantly encountering road blocks erected by hapless authority figures and others who insist on following established procedures, and having to do end runs around them. A lot goes wrong, but it’s never his fault. He is the lone hero in a very grim world of sadistic and violent crime and widespread corruption. Objectively, on the other hand, what the world sees is an alcoholic without a life, who uses bullets to solve everyone’s problems except his own. Anyone foolish enough to get close to him -- his boss, his partner, his girlfriend – ends up dead or fighting for life. In pursuit of a vicious killer he is constantly outmaneuvered as the body count climbs horrifically. In short, he is totally nuts. However, you can’t help but root for him because He is an embodiment of the fact that you can’t do anything really good if you follow the rules.
I think this book will appeal to devotees of the action adventure genre. The action has enough ins and outs and moves along at a pace that keeps the reader constantly involved. The world Wolinski inhabits is drawn with arresting detail, and the villains are all easy to hate. Wolinski’s voice is genuine and the author has an ear for dialogue. For the genre, I’d rate it a good four and a half stars. I have to knock off half a star however for the sloppy job of editing. There are problems with the grammar and some sentences that have clearly gone wrong. Also, there was some narrative discontinuity in chapter 9 that gave me the feeling that a chunk of text was missing. And the author must be using some sort of dictation software that allows him to speak the book rather than write it because there are plenty of lapsi linguae like ‘a scolding hot shower’ or ‘a room devout of occupants’ that should have been cleaned up in revise. However, overall I think most readers would enjoy the time they spend with Wolinski.