“City Dark: A Thriller” by Roger Canaff is an excellent legal thriller set in New York City in July 1977 and 2017.
On the hot, muggy, storm-filled night of July 13, 1977, the City of New York experiences a total blackout. Driving along the West Side Highway, single mother Lois DeSantos and her two young boys run out of gas. Leaving Robbie and Joe in the car, Lois goes for help. She never comes back.
Now, 40 years later, Joseph DeSantos is a respected Assistant Attorney General litigating the commitment of sex offenders to state mental health facilities. He’s also a raging alcoholic, high functioning most of the time, but occasionally subject to blackouts.
When an apparently homeless Lois is found murdered on the beach at Coney Island, Joe can’t say positively that it’s his mother because it's been such a very long time since he’s seen her. But he does have a foggy recollection of seeing this woman only recently. He just can’t remember where or when or why. Nor can he explain a certain pair of sandy shoes in his garage or how the Reggie Jackson baseball card he gave to his mother on the night of the blackout is now in his possession.
“City Dark” couldn’t be a more appropriate title. The novel is exceedingly dark, dealing as it does with murder, rape, alcoholism, child abandonment, pedophilia, mental illness, and homelessness. But it’s so very well written. The prose and dialogue are descriptive and believable. Chapters are short and to the point and move the story along at a brisk pace. And the research is first-rate, especially in terms of police and legal procedure, what it means to be a high-functioning alcoholic, and even what New York City was like in the summer of 1977 and on the night of the blackout.
Also impressive are the characters Mr. Canaff has created, especially Joe DeSantos. Yes, he’s deeply flawed. But we care about him, even with those flaws, because he never stops trying to do the right thing, even when he doesn’t want to.
And the mystery is so absorbing. What happened to Lois that night? How did she come to be homeless? Who murdered her and why? Did Joe have anything to do with it? And will he be able to “turn the page” regarding his alcoholism and find a fulfilling life?
Prior to “City Dark,” I’d never read anything by Mr. Canaff. But based on what I've read so far, I look forward to reading his previous and future works.