From Publishers Weekly
Southern California PI and occasional bit actor Saxon follows a trail of mail-order brides in this sixth entry (after Seeing the Elephant ) in a superior series. A washed-up comedy star hires Saxon to find his wife, a Hong Kong native named Doll whom he met through an organization called Asian Nights. Doll, to whom the comic signed over all his possessions, has disappeared and, through an uncommunicative lawyer, filed for divorce. Saxon and his black teenaged son Marvel, who was adopted in an earlier book, head north to a small town where the cops support a network that imports Asian women to live in conditions dangerously close to slavery. Doll begins to look almost fortunate, judged against the often brutal standard of life endured by most of the "merchandise" offered by Asian Nights. Saxon's probing irks some locals and leads to the sudden malfunction of the brakes on his Chevy. Never at a loss for female company, Saxon continues to be a glib commentator on California mores, though the vulnerabilities of parenthood prove mellowing as Marvel achieves full-fledged partnerdom in this outing. Roberts, who also writes the Cleveland-set Milan Jacovich series, plots with finesse and an admirable economy.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
About the Author
Les Roberts came to mystery writing after twenty-four years in Hollywood, having written and/or produced more than 2,500 half hours of network and syndicated television. He was the first producer and head writer of The Hollywood Squares, and has written for The Lucy Show, The Andy Griffith Show, The Jackie Gleason Show and The Man From U.N.C.L.E, among others.
In 1987 he won the very first "Best First Private Eye Novel Contest" for AN INFINITE NUMBER OF MONKEYS. In 1988 he created Cleveland private eye Milan Jacovich in PEPPER PIKE, followed by ten more novels.
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