Book Review: The Lost Coast by Roger L. Simon (1997)
Curses! Although I bought five of Roger L. Simon's Moses Wine novels in iBooks editions, the release order of the books got me.
This book was released as a trade paperback by iBooks second after
The Big Fix, so I picked it up second. Ha ha, you guys got me! This is actually a later book, 25 years after the first. Moses Wine is almost fifty, and one of those young children is in college and is accused of murder.
I guess that 25 years is the reason the author got a basic fact wrong regarding the plot of
The Big Fix: that the politician was running for the Democrat nomination for President, not for re-election to the Senate. But I digress.
I like this Moses Wine better than his youthful counterpart. He's no longer smoking hashish every couple of pages. Instead, he starts bawling every couple of pages. Sorry, wailing or sobbing, but same thing. Once again, it's not someone I want to emulate, because I strive to remain emotionally stunted and repressed.
As I mentioned, the son has been accused of eco-terrorism which resulted in the death of a logger. Moses Wine goes to northern California and finds himself embroiled in a long running battle between eco-terrorists and eco-vigilantes, between Republicans in Congress and those who don't want to rape Mother Nature on a pool table.
It's a pretty good book, a quick and engaging read. In his introduction, Simon says he's going for a more novelistic approach instead of a mystery novel. Well, he's not as transcendent of genre as Chandler, but he's not Elizabeth Linington.