It’s 1940, and Toby Peters is the worst P. I. in Los Angeles. His ex-wife thinks he's a loser, his brother, an L. A. Cop, thinks he's an @$$hole, and his former employers at Warner Brothers( where he was fired from their security department) think he's a putz. He shares his office with a dentist, and he has a clientele that is pretty much non existent. Then, he gets a call from WB; they want him to discreetly handle the payoff to someone who is blackmailing Errol Flynn with pictures of him with an underage girl...
So begins Stuart A. Kaminsky's affectionate send up of. detective movies, Film Noir, and Old Hollywood. Peters rubs shoulders with the famous and near famous of Hollywood as he attempts to unravel the true mystery behind this blackmail caper. Bodies pile up, money disappears, and Toby is beaten, shot, arrested, and screwed by the various suspects. He also has to ride herd on Errol Flynn, who is amused by the whole thing, while also dealing with Humphrey Bogart, Peter Lorre. Jack Warner, and a very upset Michael Curtiz .
Kaminsky, who is also a film historian, has done his homework. The cameo appearances by real movie people and the studio settings are all accurate; the movie Errol Flynn is shooting in the novel is the actual film he shot in 1940, “Santa Fe Trail”. More importantly, Kaminsky has his tongue planted firmly in his cheek, which creates a breezy, humorous tone as he follows the exploits of his "anti- Philip Marlowe". One sequence, where Peters chases a suspect (who is dressed in a pirate costume, no less) across the Warner Bros backlot and ruins shooting on about a dozen movies, is wonderfully droll. The actual plot is serviceable and does play fair with the tropes of the detective story, but the real treats are the Classic Hollywood Easter eggs( I mean, OF COURSE Flynn's bodyguards are Bruce Cabot, Alan Hale, and "Big Boy" Williams).
"Bullet for a Star" is the first of what would become a long running series; it is a terrific diversion and a great summer read for fans of detective stories, film noir, and Hollywood's golden age.
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