Loren D Estleman's long running Amos Walker series is one I have dipped into through the years, always knowing I am going to enjoy the reading experience. It is set in a economically deprived Detroit in Michigan where Walker operates as a PI, older, more physically scarred in body, weary of soul, and the best man to hire when it comes to missing persons. Which is why Francis X. Lawes, an influential political mover and shaker in charge of examining private sector business bids for city contracts, hires Walker. After disappointment from other agencies he has employed, he wants evidence that his wife, Paula, a PR executive, who disappeared 6 years ago, last seen in Allen Park, is either dead or alive. He wants to remarry and doesn't want to wait another year for her to be legally declared dead.
So Walker begins to dig, it soon becomes apparent that Lawes was and still is the prime suspect for Paula's murder by the police, and an old friend and retired ex-cop, John Alderdyce has never forgotten Lawes, convinced of his guilt, but lacking proof, and willing to help Walker if it will nail Lawes. It does not seem to make sense that Lawes would want to stir a hornet's nest that would put him back in the frame as a murder suspect, if he merely waited patiently for only one more year, he would be home free, and marry again with no problems. Walker goes back over the case, taking time to interview those he still can that were key to the original investigation. This has Walker encountering the likes of an audio book producer, George Hoyle, a charismatic Southern belle, a friend of Paula's, ex-gangbangers and Lawes fiancee, Holly Pride, keen that he stops looking for Paula. In a case that includes the past murder of an Allen Park cop, Marcus Root, first at the scene of Paula's abandoned car, with his notebook taken, and a present day murder, Walker works a twisted case where little is as it seems until the truth begins to emerge.
Estleman is a wonderful writer, evoking an atmospheric sense of place and location with his sharp and rich descriptions of a Detroit that Amos Walker operates in. The economic challenges and history of Detroit comes across well, along with the political corruption and deprivation. The author is an old hand when it comes to the creation of a host of diverse characters, from political elites, corporate types, criminals, and including gang members. This is a great and entertaining outing for Walker, perhaps not one of his best, but one that still had me hooked and knowing I will read any further additions in the series without question. Many thanks to Macmillan-Tor/Forge for an ARC.