About a decade ago, I had a copy of Lowell Cauffiel’s Masquerade. I thought that it was great, but I made a mistake by donating it before my better half had a chance to read it. When I saw an awful, dog-eared copy at Pensacola’s Waterfront Rescue Mission thrift store, I knew that I had invest a quarter for it.
My wife is getting ready to read Masquerade as her next book. I just read it for a second time. I seldom reread books, but Masquerade was worth it. At its core, Masquerade is a true-crime book that is all about deception – the facades that we all construct for dealing with the world.
Dr. Alan Canty was a very-successful psychologist in Detroit. He was married to another Ph.D. psychologist named Jan. But Alan had a secret life – he became heavily involved with a young prostitute named Dawn Spens and with her pimp, a habitual offender called “Lucky” Fry.
After Spens and Fry murdered Alan Canty, his secret life came to the public’s attention. The media and Jan Canty both unraveled the story – and found that almost nothing about Alan Canty was as it had first seemed. Alan had a decades-long history of “rescuing” women and of puffing up his public reputation.
Simply put, Masquerade’s amazing. Author Cauffiel does a great job of describing the characters and the high and low places in Detroit, Michigan. Read this one –you’ll never forget it.