This is an unusual departure from Zelazny's usual work, a novel of international intrigue and suspense that starts with the discovery of a body in a small art gallery in New York City and then chases itself to Vatican City and into a remote section of the Amazon rain forest, with bits of deception of misdirection along the way, before coming full circle for a conclusion. In his fine afterword Trent Zelazny says that the manuscript, which had never been previously published, was found by his father's agent, and that it probably dates from 1970. This leads to the assumption that if it were a really good book, the agent would have sold it and it would have appeared fifty years ago. It does read like something of a first draft, with some odd pacing problems and a convoluted web of tangled character motivation and some repetitive phrases. (For example, it feels like the protagonist and narrator, Ovid Wiley, talks about lighting a cigarette several times on every page.) Too, there are a couple of things that are introduced that aren't really developed and end up not going anywhere, such as a discussion of his family and his possession of a good luck gene. And would the CIA really blackmail an art gallery owner into going to The Vatican to investigate a theft instead of just sending one of their agents? But, aside from wishing that some editorial direction had resulted in Zelazny making a second pass through the manuscript to clear up some of these items, I really enjoyed the story once I got into it. There were some flashes of Zelazny's humor, wit, and lyrical prose, such as "I felt as conspicuous as a good painting in the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art." on page 233, and at one point Ovid mentions babysitting his nephew once. He gave the boy a drum to play with, and then, twenty minutes later, gives him a pocket knife and tells him that most boys' drums come filled with candy. It was a shame that the nephew got one of the empty ones... I could just picture Zelazny writing that with a grin on his face and a glint in his eye. Zelazny was a terrific storyteller, and though this one has a kind of rough-around-the-edges feel to it, it's a fun story for suspense fans as well as Zelazny completests.