From Publishers Weekly
Its urban tensions arise from race, not booze, but the Detroit of this fifth volume (after Edsel) in Estleman's ongoing saga of the Motor City is as rife with violence and corruption as the Prohibition-era burg of Whiskey River, which began the series in 1990. After three men are shot by Paul Kubicek, an off-duty cop moonlighting as a security guard, during an attempted robbery at a posh New Year's Eve party, the Detroit Police Department greets 1973 by declaring that Kubicek was working undercover for STRESS (Stop the Robberies, Enjoy Safe Streets), a notorious "police crackdown squad." Even so, the DPD can't bury the fact that the three men Kubicek shot were the only blacks at the party, and that only two of them were involved in the robbery. To head off a scandal, black policeman Charles Battle is assigned to investigate, and he comes up against the racism of the old-boy cop network. It turns out that the heist was organized by Wilson McCoy, one of the FBI's 10 Most Wanted, a marijuana chain-smoking black radical who's trying to get money to buy illegal weapons. Through grittily precise detail of character and place, Estleman compresses the subsequent action, which revolves around kidnapping and multiple murders, into a tightly paced yarn that reads like a taut docudrama. The story culminates in a wild courtroom finale in which several kinds of justice?and injustice?are meted out at once. It's difficult to believe that Detroit will ever find a more eloquent poet than Estleman, who here, as in his Amos Walker PI mysteries, celebrates the gristle and sinew of the city as well as its aching heart.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
The fifth entry in Estleman's Detroit series--mysteries in which a city, not a sleuth, is the recurring character--is set in the mid-seventies, when the Motor City was still scarred by the riots of the sixties and when white flight was more a stampede than a trend. A young black cop, Charlie Battle, is assigned to handle the investigation after an off-duty cop kills three black intruders at an upscale suburban party. Battle knows he's a token meant to placate an enraged black community, but he's intent on finding the truth, whether it exonerates the shooter or implicates him in murder. Both the cops and a group of local black militants pressure Battle to edge the truth their way. There are also carefully drawn parallel plots involving an illegal gun dealer, a kidnapping, and a paranoid Black Panther who remains in hiding even though the cops are no longer interested. This story of a once-great city in decline is played out by people who don't really understand their roles in the inexorable, merciless crush of history. A fine installment in an innovative series.
Wes Lukowsky
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.