It often pays to follow your instincts. I was in a bookstore one day -- the day itself was nothing special -- when I spotted this book on a rack. I wasn't into any particular genre (I'm still not), and I'll never be able to tell you what one thing drew me to picking up BLUE BELLE. My instincts just told me to get it, even though I had never heard of Andrew Vachss before in my life, and I've seen far, far more appealing cover art than what was displayed of a glamorous blonde bombshell and the grim profile of a mystery man. The synopsis of the story on the back cover was intriguing enough, so I got it. I had no idea what kind of amazing yet relentlessly dark ride I was in for.
Ever since, I've had nothing but the utmost respect for Andrew Vachss, and if in any way I can enlighten others about his novels and more importantly the good works he does, his mission to enlighten us about 'The Children of the Secret', I will without a doubt. Vachss has done many things in his life, but he's most committed to his work as a child lawyer and to increasing awareness about the hideous evil of child abuse, physical and sexual, a subject too many aren't aware of...at least, most aren't aware of how completely horrifying and overwhelming this evil is in our world today. His novels, in fact, have been some of his best weapons in getting out his message of what kind of dark, terrible things are happening in the shadows we refuse to really look into...and what we can do to make things better.
BLUE BELLE, like most all of Vachss' works, enlightens us to the world we citizens can't see...it's a pavement-coarse, brutal world where survival is everything. This is the third novel in a long series of books featuring his signature hero, Burke. Unlike Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer, though, Burke isn't a private investigator, altough he does fulfill the spirit of that role at times. Burke is the name most know him by and his past is a mystery to everyone but himself, although there's no doubt he's been to prison and he'll never go back. He's a thief and con artist who lives so far under the radar he even pays taxes under another name. He also has what can be best described as a truly extraordinary family, bound together by honor instead of blood relations. They're a singular supporting cast that includes Prof, a short, aged black prophet who taught Burke everything he knows about the streets and how to survive on them...Mole, a quiet and deadly-dangerous genius who lives under a junkyard...Max the Silent, a veteran enforcer and professional killer who is unable to speak, but he and Burke use a sign language only they both know...among others. If one of them is threatened, they all come together to do whatever is necessary to end the threat.
Burke is sometimes an investigator when someone contacts him (they're few and far between because Burke doesn't advertise his services) to solve a problem that no one else can. Teenaged prostitutes are dying, murdered by those who drive a mysterious vehicle some have called the Ghost Van, and the pimps affected most want Burke to find and stop the killers. The reward they offer is more than enough incentive, but they also give him a childlike yet passionate stripper named Belle to support him. Burke and Belle fall into an intense, sexually supercharged love affair made all the more poignant when she tells him about her nightmarish past. That's enough to get the blood boiling for any man with a heart, but the stakes get raised to shocking levels when Burke discovers the Ghost Van is under the protection of a monster feared by the underworld...Mortay, a martial artist who wants something that will make things VERY personal for Burke...
The atmosphere of BLUE BELLE is almost relentlessly bleak, especially when it comes to the subject of child abuse. It's a subject that the author knows intimately because of his passionate fight to make others aware of this evil. The story has a nasty, serrated edge to it that can only be called authentic. When you read a story by Vachss, you have no doubt you've glanced through a window briefly into society's underbelly, and it's never been presented in a way quite like it is here...it's never felt more real. The story is fast-paced, violent and sensual...the characters aren't just colorful and unique, we're driven to care deeply for them and what will happen next. It isn't perfect, though...things happen, especially at the climax, that could have been written better. Even though it's the third of Burke's novels, it's friendly to newbies...I had no problem jumping into his world a bit late, and it made me want to hunt down his first two novels. I've never regretted it, and you won't, either...hunt down BLUE BELLE and read it!