Book Report: Alice in Jeopardy by Ed McBain (2004)
Et tu, McBain?
I guess it comes as no surprise. Many of his post-2001 books, particularly the ones after 2003, offer their asides that identify exactly how McBain felt about President Bush. He managed to dodge overt political disapproval for almost 50 years, but the climate and tenor of the times allowed him to unleash his disdain, so this book includes a throw away about how Bush ruined the economy and two references to the Iraq War as a Bush crusade. These sorts of things put me off of writers almost daily; it's only McBain's exemplary career beforehand that keeps me from dismissing him as a leftist hack. Sadly, that's what it's like to be a semi-conservative reader in the early part of the 21st century.
Now, this book is a Florida book. Because I've not read a Matthew Hope book for a while, it's easy for me to forget that McBain did his dabbling in the world of MacDonald (mentioned by name in this book) and Hiaasen. It seems like he's trying to emulate the latter a bit here, with a cast of odd characters weaving in and out.
The titular Alice is a recent widow whose husband drowned in the Gulf of Mexico. She's running out of money, waiting for the insurance company to finally pay up, and trying to keep it together. When someone kidnaps her children, the various law enforcement agencies move in with little success and Alice herself has to do something.
The book falls short of the Hiaasen standard and doesn't move quickly enough to fit into the MacDonald mold. Ultimately, it's a lesser book in the McBain canon (politics aside), but it's not a bad book on its own. If someone writes the incomplete
Becca in Jeopardy, I might read it. But it's not an 87th Precinct novel, that's for sure.
Books mentioned in this review: