The Quiet Game is slow to get off the ground. It took me almost a month to finish it, after putting it aside several times because the buildup was so, to put it nicely, leisurely. Somewhere around the 100 page mark, it finally picked up and my interest was piqued. It is also very long - my copy, a rather tall paperback, is over 600 pages in length. In all honesty, I think it could have been at least 100 pages shorter and nothing would have been lost. Some of the scenes are very drawn out and there are some scenes I don’t think are really necessary to the plot. I don’t like filler in the books I read and I feel there is quite a bit of it here.
That said, the story is strong and engaging. Penn Cage, a prosecutor and best-selling author, has returned to his parents’ home in Natchez, Mississippi, following the death of his wife. Penn is still trying to cope as is his young daughter and, with the impending execution of a man he put on death row and the ensuing media circus, it is definitely a good time to lay low with family. What was supposed to be a break for Penn, however, turns into a personal hell as he learns that his father is being blackmailed by a very sketchy character who is also a ex-cop and ex-con.
To add further to his troubles, during an interview with Caitlin Masters, an ambitious local journalist, he mentions a decades old cold case that is long-considered to be a racially-motivated murder. A young man, Del Payton, was blown up in his car in 1968, just days after the murder of Martin Luther King, Jr. Payton, a civil rights worker, was a veteran of the Korean War and he was about to be promoted to a new position at the factory where he worked - a position his white colleagues felt was a “white job.” Penn, under the impression that the conversation is off the record, says more than he should and the next morning, after Caitlin has written and printed a story about the unsolved murder quoting Penn, the poop hits the fan and many in the town are angered, leading to violence and threats.
To make matters even more complicated, Penn finds Payton’s mother and widow on his parents’ doorstep, pleading with him to find out who murdered Del and to bring the killer to justice. So, instead of finding peace and quiet, Penn finds himself trying to help his father with his blackmailer and also trying to solve a murder that is thirty years old and may involve officials high up in government as well as a man who almost destroyed Penn’s father. The story that follows is full of ups and downs, suspense and lulls, tense scenes full of gunfire and mind-numbing scenes involving Penn and his annoying, selfish ex-girlfriend, Livy. When the suspense is there, it is full on but from time to time, it drags as the more mundane parts of the investigation are pursued and, among other things, as Penn’s relationship with Livy is explored.
The Quiet Game is a really good book with some wonderfully-written characters. Watching Penn work to discover the truth is often exciting. So many characters are playing the “quiet game,” basically the last one to talk wins and there are a lot of characters not talking about the Del Payton murder. Iles does an excellent job of describing Natchez past and present. It’s hard to read at times with the racial slurs and the prejudices in both the 60s and 90s. Occasionally, since the book is set in the late 90s, it becomes dated, but not overly so, with the mentions of beepers, camcorders and Sally Jessy Raphael, whose original talk show disappeared in the early 2000s, I believe.
While I enjoyed the story, the characters and the twists and turns, the length and slowness did dampen my overall enjoyment. I’m really surprised to see quite a few reviews calling it fast-paced from page one. It was several dozen pages before I would call it fast-paced and even then, there were places were it just idled. I also did not like the use of present tense, I always find this distracting in books. Eventually, I got used to it but I am still not a big fan.
Iles is a very good writer and The Quiet Game is an intelligent, complex book but I’m not sure I would read anymore in the Penn Cage series. I glanced at the descriptions and lengths of the next books in the series and I feel they would be more of the same. I won’t say never but definitely not anytime soon.