Loren D. Estleman, The Left-Handed Dollar (Tor, 2013)
In this one, one of the stronger entries in the series, Walker is hired by legendary defense attorney, Lucille Lettermore -- a.k.a. Lefty Lucy -- to try and find evidence that will overturn the conviction on attempted murder charges of Joseph Michael Ballista, also known as Joey Ballistic, a mafioso currently released from prison into house custody because he's dying. Lettermore is determined to free him by getting all of his previous convictions set aside; get the attempted murder conviction to fall and the rest fall into line like dominos. Despite the fact that the victim was Walker's only friend, an investigative reporter, Walker takes the case and, as he investigates, discovers that great life lesson that most crime novels explore: both people and things are rarely what they appear to be. Walker's trail leads through a changing Detroit -- Estleman does a great job with the local color -- on to the women in Joey Ballistic's life to crooked cops, other cops who want to strip Walker of his license, and other victims. It's a case that instead of breaking open and simplifying as we read simply gets more complicated, leading to an ending that is both revelatory and logical. The Left-Handed Dollar is a solid piece of work, a book that will make you happy that Estleman has published about 60 other novels that you can read next. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET book review by Michael Scott Cain 18 May 2013 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |