On my desperate search for a good crime series worth continuing, Tony Black's 'Paying for it' was my most recent try. I like Noir, I like Pulp, I like Hard-boiled crime, and by this measure, the read was quite enjoyable. The protagonist, Gus Dury, is a boozy alcoholic, former journalist, soon-to-be divorce, living in Edinburgh. He is doing one of his buddies a favor by investigating the murder of his son. Dury is a really cool and literate guy who delivers easy-going quotes even when he is beaten up, which happens quite often in the book. His background is comprehensible but also a bit ordinary, guess it, yes, he was battered by his father until he fled home, and this family history makes a big part of the personal story. The novel is written quite skilled and really intense, but nevertheless, the story isn't the most innovative one I ever read as a background of a fallen man.
The case itself has a reasonable amount of suspense, playing in Edinburgh's criminal community, strongly gaining momentum in the end when the book gets a really fast read. I had some difficulties with the fact that the protagonist was so sleazy and fucked-up. Not that I wouldn't like that in a Noir crime novel, but somehow I asked myself why and how Dury manages to pursue the case, as he is always so close to the next bottle of beer or whiskey. At least in the beginning, there is really no self-reflection – maybe that's quite common for an alcoholic, but again, there is only a small step from being temporarily in difficulties to being completely fallen, and the author doesn't really explain the motives and goals of his protagonist. One of the things I liked better is the offhand manner in which Dury comments on many actual topics like gentrification in big cities or just bad taste in music. I guess I will at least read the second book of the series.