You don’t need to read the previous five books in this series to enjoy this one. It helps, a little maybe, and I’ve done it, but that doesn’t mean you should feel you have to. This is a great mystery with some dark unblinking patches that include glimpses of pedophilia. If dark topics like that easily upset you, you can skip this and be ok. But if you do, you’ll miss out on a decent read with an especially twisty ending you won’t expect.
Gail Richardson is missing, and her daughter, Amanda, worries for her mother’s safety. Gail Richardson was married to a friend of Doc Ford named Bobby. He and Doc did clandestine stuff in southeast Asia after the Vietnam war, and an explosion vaporized Bobby one day. He left behind Gail and five-year-old Amanda. Gail remarried but never really loved the man. When that marriage fell apart, she got caught in the influential sphere of a nearly 400-pound man with child-like features. It is he who marries Gail, cleans out her accounts, then isolates and imprisons her mentally in a tropical small town on the Panama Canal. Amanda wants Doc Ford to rescue her mom.
The book feels a little slow to me. It’s not the kind of slow that lets your mind wander, and if you stay with it, the final two hours or so (normal Speed) will draw you in and change your heart rate in a place or two. It’s very much worth the time you’ll spend with it.