Picked this up on a whim -- it's the first in a projected series about Quinn Farrell, an LA loner who works as a fixer for a Hollywood producer, cleaning up various messes so that the show can go on. His backstory is studded with little nuggets (condescending father, teenage motorcycle thieving, college at Berkeley), but it's not enough to get any real sense of what paths in his life led to his morally dubious career. Perhaps the author is leaving that open for development in future books, but it left Farrell feeling kind of thin on the page for me.
The story here involves an up and coming movie star with a weakness for underage girls. When one of them threatens to call the cops if he doesn't provide some serious hush money, the star calls his producer, who calls Farrell, who arrives and starts trying to resolve the situation with the minimum of fuss. That plotline is all well and good and felt more or less plausible -- but when it happens a second time with the same actor, Farrell's suspicions are roused. Meanwhile, a cute new pediatric doctor just moved in next door to Farrell, and they manage to fall for each other more or less instantly, provoking him to be a better person.
If the plot mechanics are a little unsubtle, the scenes and human interactions are all well done. From Farrell's banter with the guy who runs his vending machine business, to the menacing Russian mobsters who come by for their cut, to his interactions with the woman next door and his clients -- it's all pretty good. Farrell's got a very slight edge to him, so it's not standard tough-guy stuff, but a little more interesting than that. Readers who enjoy the darker side of LA -- maybe fans of Michael Connelly, or Richard Lange, etc. might enjoy this. I'd probably give the next book in the series a shot, just to see if Farrell's backstory is fleshed out a bit more.