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A Common Ordinary Murder: A Novel [Hardcover]

Donald Pfarrer (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

August 5, 2008
In the Chicago Tribune, Alan Cheuse described Donald Pfarrer’s novel The Fearless Man as “the gold standard for any other fiction to come out about the [Vietnam] war.” Now, in this new novel, Pfarrer presents another kind of war, the one in America’s streets, with the same kind of excitement, style, and power.

Steven McCord, a lieutenant of police in a fairly large midwestern city, has been coarsened by twenty years’ exposure to violence and cruelty. At forty-two, he has reached a crossroads in his career and in his life. He’s been entrusted with command of one of his city’s toughest districts, and as a senior lieutenant, he is poised for promotion to captain. But instead he’s studying law–because he wants out. His old mentor, Sergeant Hughes, fears that McCord will soon enter into that most contemptible of all legal specialties, criminal defense. McCord denies it, but in truth he doesn’t know exactly where he’s going to end up.

Then comes the “common ordinary murder” of an old eccentric–a resident of McCord’s district–and with it a personal crisis for McCord. Having given up on God long ago, he now seems to be losing faith in humanity as well. But something about the case draws him, against his will, deeper into the lives of the victim and his family, pulling McCord back to a place where he will know again the passion and pain of being alive.

Written in the intense, clear-cut style that is Donald Pfarrer’s trademark, A Common Ordinary Murder is a gripping story of crime and punishment; it is also the drama of one man’s test of love and strength.

Advance praise for A Common Ordinary Murder:

“A number of intriguing, complicated characters; a particularly heinous crime; solid police work; and a poignant sketch of a city in decline are good reasons to read this one . . . really an examination of faith, its loss, marriage, and love.”
Booklist

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Strong, clear prose lifts Pfarrer's intelligent if at times slow and uneventful novel, set in an unnamed Midwestern city. Steven McCord, an extremely able 42-year-old police lieutenant, is taking law classes as he considers a career change. He's also tempted to betray his saintly wife, Nora, and begins to visit the apartment of a lovely nurse 10 years younger than he. Meanwhile, an elderly lawyer, Charles Carden, has been murdered, and his visiting daughter, Marie, has disappeared. Carden, who coincidentally was an acquaintance of Nora's, kept a journal filled with philosophical musings over which McCord ponders. Once Marie's brutalized body turns up, McCord is haunted by her image and grows increasingly, inexplicably, obsessed with finding her killers. Admirers of Pfarrer's The Fearless Man and other earlier works will find much to like, but readers used to faster-paced crime fiction may grow impatient with the angst-filled McCord. (Aug.) ""
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved."

From Booklist

Decorated Vietnam War veteran and longtime journalist Pfarrer has more in mind than his title suggests. Ostensibly a police procedural, his novel is really an examination of faith, its loss, marriage, and love. Steven McCord runs a police district in a beleaguered Rust Belt city. His superiors see him as future-chief-of-police material. But after two decades of success, McCord has lost his faith in justice and the law. His wife Nora’s devout Catholicism sustains her, and she cannot understand her husband’s loss of faith. Their marriage suffers as Steven is drawn to another woman, but an apparently routine murder presents McCord with the possibility of renewal—or the destruction of his marriage. A number of intriguing, complicated characters; a particularly heinous crime; solid police work; and a poignant sketch of a city in decline are good reasons to read this one. But overlong attempts to plumb the confused and conflicted hearts and minds of the characters may deter readers who take their crime straight. --Thomas Gaughan

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Random House; 1 edition (August 5, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1400066905
  • ISBN-13: 978-1400066902
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,596,613 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Mesmerizing, September 2, 2008
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This review is from: A Common Ordinary Murder: A Novel (Hardcover)
This is a novel of extraordinary power, that seizes the reader from the first page and compells us to care about its central protagonist, a police officer struggling with a mid-life crisis as he investigates a terrible crime. Donald Pfarrer's characters -- Police Lt. Steven McCord, who moonlights as a law student and falls hard for a nurse he barely knows; his wife, Nora, who has risen at city hall without losing her intense Catholic faith; Charles Carden, an elderly lawyer haunted by his experience of war -- are all wrestling with the big questions: life, death, love, marriage and infidelity, faith and the loss of faith, the human capacity for courage and brutality. But they are also rooted in a tautly-written narrative of fierce suspense and vivid, evocative detail. Not your common ordinary crime novel.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Common Ordinary Murder is a complex, exceptional story, September 11, 2008
By 
Bookreporter (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Common Ordinary Murder: A Novel (Hardcover)
Donald Pfarrer may not be well known yet. But if he continues to write more books like his acclaimed THE FEARLESS MAN and his current A COMMON ORDINARY MURDER, then fame and fortune are inevitable. His themes are complex, and his writing style accommodates the depths that he explores. Fairness, justice, love, responsibility, devotion and self-awareness are neatly woven into this exceptional story.

The novel opens with the thoughts and actions of an old man who has begun to lose touch with reality. His musings slip from past to present and are interspersed with his trying to remember what his reason was for shaving today. Before long, Charles Carden becomes the victim of a homicide that is known in cop talk as a COM, a common ordinary murder. But, when police lieutenant Steven McCord begins to investigate, it moves up several notches and reveals a double homicide with brutal circumstances.

Steven McCord is a 20-year veteran of the city's police department and, at age 42, finds himself weary of all the misery and despair he has seen. He is studying law and hopes to become a successful attorney, leaving behind the crime-filled streets. Those closest to him cannot understand why he would give up a pending promotion to Captain for an uncertain future as a defense lawyer. His wife Nora is his best friend, as well as the love of his life, yet her most logical reasoning cannot dissuade him. Nor can the ranting of his former mentor and now good friend, Gil Hughes, who never minces words with his former rookie, now his boss.

To add to his building angst, McCord finds himself hopelessly drawn to a younger woman who he met briefly at a party. In typical detective fashion, he learns who she is and where she lives. He stands outside her building and waits to catch a glimpse of her. He ponders, and agonizes over his thoughts. He is torn between what he wants and what is right. He has everything, including a wife who loves him like no one else ever has and who he loves in return. But obsession trumps reason every time, and he continues making dangerous choices.

Meanwhile, McCord is still searching for the murderers in the COM. Painstaking steps lead him to the identity of one of the pair, and he choreographs a perfect sting that will eventually lead to an arrest. Yet, once again, he is faced with a choice. His inner man is preparing himself to exact swift, street justice while his conscience tries to pull him in the right direction.

The combination of morality play and police procedural is compelling and a bit out of the norm in this age when a walk in the park can lead to a roll in the hay. If you enjoy reading a book that provides food for thought and conversation, then A COMMON ORDINARY MURDER will do so in spades.

--- Reviewed by Maggie Harding
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5.0 out of 5 stars Great depth of character, August 30, 2009
By 
M. R. Gion (Morgan Hill, CA USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: A Common Ordinary Murder: A Novel (Hardcover)
This is a great book. All the main characters have been fully-developed and the climactic scene is vividly described. I usually enjoy Raymond Chandler and Walter Mosley murder-mysteries and found this book to be up to their high standards.
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