The 9th book in the Amos Walker series, Silent Thunder once again satisfies my need for fast paced, in your face action accompanied by a wise-cracking PI who always seems to have a pithy rejoinder for any situation. While the case itself is a little tenuous in parts, there is no doubting the capabilities of the Detroit-based detective to stick his nose in where it’s liable to get shot off…and that makes it a winner in my book.
Walker is hired to help Constance Thayer in her upcoming court case. She shot her husband, Doyle Thayer Jnr 6 times in the back while he slept. He had been abusive for years and she is claiming self-defense. Walker’s job is to find evidence that will support the claim that he was a dangerous and violent man.
One of the avenues that appears to be a sensible one to follow, at least sensible to Walker, is a little digging into Thayer’s hobby. The hobby happens to be an extensive gun collection, although it’s far more than that with all kinds of arms, weapons and ordnance involved, some of it hi-tech and extremely lethal. By talking to his suppliers he hopes to build a picture of a dangerous man who was in the process of building an arsenal.
What he doesn’t expect is the hornets nest he’s stirred up by his inquiries. He also doesn’t expect his car to be riddled with bullets, his skull to be dented or a growing body count to be directly connected to the people he talks to.
Although it appears his initial investigation, the one he’s actually hired to perform, is sidetracked by the far more exciting prospect of bringing down a gang of gun-runners, somehow he manages to solve it - almost in an “oh, by the way” moment.
As so often happens, there is a plethora of dodgy cops looking the other way, halfwit bad guys who always seem to let their guards down at the crucial moment and a megalomaniac nutjob who thinks he’s going to rule the world. But, and this is quite unusual, Walker also manages to come across an honest cop or two, not to mention the introduction of Horace Livinggood, a federal agent who proves to be a reliable ally.
This is a pacy hardboiled detective novel that follows the traditional PI-style formula. Walker’s quick and sardonic wit, his sharp tongue and his absolute refusal to take any moment too seriously makes this another enjoyable outing in a consistently entertaining series.