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Patrick K. Jassoy, It Isn't Easy Being Johnny Style (Booklocker, 2003) |
It Isn't Easy Being Johnny Style tells of a private detective in modern Chicago with an old grudge, a penchant for extended flashbacks and a vocabulary that can only be described as anachronistic. And it's not easy to write a noir-style detective novel either, if Patrick Jassoy's journeys with Mr. Style are any indication.
But Johnny himself just never seems to fit in -- at least not with himself. A child of the 1980s trying to sound like a man of the 1940s, a street punk who randomly acquires the attitude of a degreed psychiatrist, Johnny has an unfortunate knack for pointing out how unlikely his story actually is. Since he's already dealing with an untouchable high school crime king in a strangely cop free universe, this is not a good thing. But when Johnny isn't drawing attention to his own impossibility, he's a lot of fun to watch. His story's got drama, pathos, explosions and all the plausibility of the drunk at the local bar who says the FBI is sending messages to his dog. But as long as the drunk stays entertaining, it might be worth it to buy another round, and hear why It Isn't Easy Being Johnny Style. by Sarah Meador |