Dead Bang: An Art Hardin Mystery
Robert E. Bailey
M. Evans & Company, Inc.
c/o The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group
4501 Forbes Avenue Suite 200, Lanham, MD 20706
(800) 462-6420, http://www.rlpgtrade.com
9781590771099, $21.95, 2007
From a Mob hit thirty years ago on the outskirts of Detroit to a
fight over a piece of luggage at an airport carousel, "Dead
Bang" lopes around the Wolverine State, leaving a trail of bullets,
fires, loose cash, kidnappings and bodies.
This is the third Art Hardin Mystery, so there's some
catching-up to do, although "Dead Bang" ably stands alone,
like the proverbial last man.
I really enjoyed meeting Art and Wendy, longtime married PIs, with
their own separate companies and an amusing and familiar repartee. Both
being of a certain age, they have history, and in Art's case,
something he was working on as a young man, suddenly comes back to bite
him.
Art is at a meet with Mark Behler, a local news anchor who's
outspokenly anti-gun on his shows and says he has a lead into that long
ago Mob hit. When a middle-aged woman comes in and starts shooting, Art,
being a concealed weapons carrier and a firm believer in the Second
Amendment, shoots back, accurately. Mark rushes to the woman's side
with his tape recorder still going. Just as she expires, she says
something which makes him very uneasy, and leads him to convince Art to
help him legally get a gun, under the guise of showing his TV audience
just how easy it is. Turns out it isn't easy, which frustrates the
newsman to no end.
Later, when Wendy is driving Art to the airport to pick up Karen
Smith, someone Art had been hired to protect a few years back, and whom
they had kind of adopted (and whom we might have met in either
"Private Heat" or "Dying Embers") returns from a
Caribbean vacation towing her latest lover, a comedian of Middle Eastern
extract, and a suitcase of lovely new undies. Then Art and lover Manny
fight over the bag and it rips open. It's packed with used American
money--the chase is on.
Sometimes it's Art and Wendy doing the chasing, and sometimes
it's the bad guys with their arsenal and cell of back-up thugs. All
the time "Dead Bang" is fast, lively and surprisingly
informative and ingenious. I especially enjoyed the insights into
Detroit's past and present, the married with older children focus,
and the different perspective that one FBI agent, raised in Egypt and
America, brings to the mix.
"Dead Bang" has some things to say about good guys and
bad and terrorism, about the sorry state of a once-great industrial
region, about gun ownership and misuse, and living long enough to gain
some maturity. It also has some great punch-lines.
If you like your mysteries peppered with the bizarre and hilarious,
with side dishes of history, then "Dead Bang" is a dead-on
read for you!
COPYRIGHT 2008 Midwest Book
Review Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.