Bob Moore: No Hero seems like a critique of the superhero genre, yet it really never goes the distance in that regard. I also had a little difficulty in establishing when this book takes place. It reads like it is set anywhere between the 1950s and early 1980s (rotary phones are still in use, for example). The internet, laptops, and other modern technologies exist, but they're hoarded and used exclusively by supers, or people with fantastic powers. If this is actually the result of the Super State, which is a borderless governmental body for supers, is in fact a fascist regime controlling technology and information to keep normal people (called tippys) down, that is certainly a powerful and interesting idea. However, this is never fully explained, and so it lacks the impact it would have were it explored in even the slightest fashion. The rest of the book seems like it wants to critique the notion of people running around with wild powers. The protagonist certainly has a dim view of them, and Andry constantly supports a notion that supers aren't terribly bright, compassionate, or particularly moral. The effect is to leave the reader with a, "Just what are you trying to say?" feeling.
Bob Moore is an atypical private eye, which is what Andry goes for from the outset. From his name down to his bank account, Bob is not your typical down-on-his-luck gumshoe. He doesn't have a cool name, and he makes pretty good bank from investigating supers. He also used to be married to one, a marriage that ended in tragedy. There's more emotion to a guy like Bob, which is a nice change of pace from the emotionless, cynical Phil Marlowe analogues. It's a wee bit silly that supers, who are often depicted as possessing criminological and detection skills, need a private eye to do their dirty work for them. That's an easy point to overlook, however, as the narrative flow is smooth.
The plot is pretty basic. Bob is brought in by a super with whom he has a history to investigate disappearances of other supers. The book is not heavy on this plot, and it resolves pretty easily without much work on Bob's part. A few points are never explained, and the clues are not laid out in a way for the reader to solve the mystery ahead of time. I figured it out anyway, based on the relatively small cast of characters introduced to us. The majority of the book deals with how much Bob dislikes a certain character. In fact, very little happens in this book. The mystery itself resolves in a weak fashion. Granted, not every book has to end in a fistfight, with explosions all around, but this just had a tacked on feeling.