I would like this book more if it were a stand-alone novel. It is not, however. It is the seventh book in a series that the publishers are now referring to as "The Cecil Younger Investigations." This book was published in 2018; the previous volume in the series, Cold Water Burning, first appeared in 2001. The characters have aged realistically, even if not entirely in real time; a child who was an infant in the 2001 book is thirteen years old in Baby's First Felony.
In the first six books in the series, Cecil Younger was a private investigator, mostly working on behalf of defendants in court cases. In this book, Younger works exclusively in that capacity. He has now married and is living with his wife, Jane Marie, their thirteen year old daughter Blossom, and Todd, a man who, like Younger, is in his late fifties. Younger used to be Todd's guardian, as he "rests comfortably on the solidly affected end of the Asperger's scale." Younger has always been portrayed as a kind and concerned man who strives to help others. Readers familiar with the previous books in the series have, I believe, come to like and respect the character of Younger. That is why the terrible things that happen to him and his family in this book are especially unsettling.
Almost the entire book as presented as Younger's allocution before a panel of judges. Wikipedia explains that an allocution is:
a formal statement made to the court by the defendant who has been found guilty prior to being sentenced. It is part of the criminal procedure in some jurisdictions using common law.
The reader does not know until much later in the book what crime Younger has been found guilty of committing.
I have never been involved in an allocution, but I strongly suspect that judges would not allow a defendant to recite a 232 page statement to the court unless they are actually compelled by law to do so. I also doubt that the defendant would even want to wonder as far off-topic as Younger does. The following is a small excerpt from Younger's statement:
The rain had stopped momentarily, and the wind carried the faint smell of the sea. Straight overhead, the sky was blue, and I could hear gulls calling above the harbor. A fat raven with a black cookie in its beak stood on the lip of a municipal garbage bin that was propped open. It bobbed on its twig legs and twisted its head one way and then another suspiciously, as if it was certain I was going to snatch the cookie away. As I approached, it bobbed deep, and the lionlike mane flared before the bird bobbed again, then lifted into the air and flew away with its plunder. Just as the raven crested out over the harbor, the clouds covered the sun and rain began falling again.
This may be splendid prose, but I think that it is most unlikely as part of the allocution.
The story involves a great amount of casual cruelty and violence, white supremacy, illegal drugs, and child molestation. Because Straley is such a good writer, readers might well care about the people who are injured or killed (well, some of them, at least); I know that I did.
There is also a lot of humor. The entire last section of the book is a comic manual for criminals entitled "Baby's First Felony," written by the public defender with whom Younger works. In that context, the title makes sense. As a title for the book as a whole, I think it is terrible. I believe that the title makes the book sound like a light and funny caper story; that is far from what it truly is.
There are also a series of jokes that Younger's former ward, Todd, is learning to tell, because "joke telling...helps create a kind of ready-made emotional relationship for people with autism." I thought some of these were really funny, others (intentionally) offensive. One of my favorite scenes in the book is the repetition late in the story of a joke first heard much earlier.
In addition to things that I have already mentioned, other flaws include the unexplained hostility toward Younger of some of the people with whose defense he has assisted. I understand that they might resent the fact that the defense may have been unsuccessful, but there is never an implication that Younger did not do as much as possible to help these folks. (And, of course, he was not the attorney representing them, but merely an investigator in that attorney's office.) It is clear that the criminal identified only as "the Sweeper" has considered Younger to have been condescending, but there is no evidence that this is true.
The often-repeated appellation "Sweeper" is irritating, because its use makes no sense. Younger tells the judges whom he is addressing that "I don't like to use real names for anyone not named as a co-defendant, so I call him Sweeper, like the clown who sweeps up the spotlight." This is nonsense. At this point, Sweeper's real identity is a matter of public record. Also, it simply is not true; Younger evidently uses the real name of every single other relevant person in the book.
A large plot-hole takes place when a police lieutenant who has been notified by Younger about a missing child calls Younger and says, "We need to talk, I think I can help you out." The lieutenant leaves his personal cell phone number. This might well be the information Younger desperately needs, but he does not call the lieutenant back. I repeat: Younger does not call back the police lieutenant, who might have information that could save the child's life. I do not believe that there is any explanation given for why he does not.
As with every book in this series, there is much that is fine. Characters, even minor ones, are convincingly human, with believable quirks. The folks, mostly former clients, who assist Younger in his effort to recover the missing child are kind and, indeed, heroic.
The setting, Sitka, Alaska in a period of one hundred six consecutive days of rain, is nicely presented. It makes frayed nerves and violence more understandable.
I don't know if there will be further books in this series. That seems unlikely, but I would have thought that publishing this book after a seventeen year hiatus was equally unlikely. If this is the last book in the series, I am sorry that the story of Cecil Younger does not have a more cheerful final chapter.