When a man for no apparent reason to do so hires Chelsea private eye Dan Fortune to find the killer of a cocktail waitress, Fortune is as curious about his employer as about the victim. Then the waitress turns out to be the scion of an aristocratic old Dutch family and the going gets dangerous for Fortune, as the trail leads him to upstate New York and a desolate Arizona Indian reservation.
Michael Collins was a Pseudonym of Dennis Lynds (1924–2005), a renowned author of mystery fiction. Raised in New York City, he earned a Bronze Star and a Purple Heart during World War II, before returning to New York to become a magazine editor. He published his first book, a war novel called Combat Soldier, in 1962, before moving to California to write for television.
Two years later Collins published the Edgar Award–winning Act of Fear (1967), which introduced his best-known character: the one-armed private detective Dan Fortune. The Fortune series would last for more than a dozen novels, spanning three decades, and is credited with marking a more politically aware era in private-eye fiction. Besides the Fortune novels, the incredibly prolific Collins wrote science fiction, literary fiction, and several other mystery series. He died in Santa Barbara in 2005.
Lucked out that I finished this one on the last day of my Kindle Unlimited subscription as it’s the only one in the Dan Fortune series my local library doesn’t have.
One of the best of the four I’ve read so far, maybe my favorite after Act of Fear. Michael Collins/Dennis Lynds takes the story out of New York City, or at least large parts of it, to investigate corruption in an upstate New York town. I always love a good tale of municipal corruption and there’s plenty of it here. But because this is a Dan Fortune novel, and this series is so clearly inspired by Ross Macdonald’s Archer series, eventually, we get to the dirty family dealings. And that’s when the rug of the plot gets pulled out from underneath.
Now, I’m not always a fan of the rug getting pulled out. It can be a lazy plot device. But here, it works and it works for reasons I can’t speak about without spoiling anything. It makes the story about something else but in a way that feels true to the struggle of identity and family life. And as this series has shown through the first four books, it’s not afraid to shy away from social issues. It deals with a big one here that, again, I can’t talk about because of spoilers. And there is a bit too much of the “Proud Liberal White Man” tone in how Collins deals with it. But it’s something you rarely see in mystery novels and I was impressed.
Gonna take a break from this series for a bit but it’s worth returning to.
I wanted to give this fantastic mystery adventure the full five stars, but I just couldn't. Too many little things nagged at me amidst great characters and a plot that never stopped moving. The little things. Like after being tied up, the one-armed detective "rubbed his wrists" to get blood circulating? And some of the killings and character leaps and long explanatory expositions ... A fantastic story by a master writer. Just missing a little something for me when all said and done.
A life of privilege, forsaken for passion. Her lover, husband goes to war. Korea. He becomes POW. Escapes. Returns home after a long absence. He has two daughters, that he will never know. He's wife has remarried. Returned to her life of privilege and status. She will protect it at all costs. Fate or just bad luck? A tremendous read. Full of twists and turns. Betrayal, deceit and will the truth be told?