Unless youre a police officer, you can only imagine what its like having a partner.
We see it portrayed in books and films, and I gather its something like a marriage. So when youre starting out together when you get assigned a new partner its sort of like an arranged marriage. Theres a sniffing period, a getting-to-know-you time, and then finally, theres a bond formed.
Or not. Sometimes it doesnt work out.
And thats one of the reasons we love crime fiction . . . detective novels . . . police procedurals. By any name, they always smell as sweet. We've been in love with these books since Fyodor Dostoyevsky wrote Crime and Punishment. These books are not just about bad guys and good guys. They're also about people and relationships and how human beings learn to love each other, or hate each other.
This is particularly good time for those of us who love these books. Go to your favorite local bookstore and these two will be on the front table, inviting you to read them:
Wambaugh did much to invent the modern version of this kind of novel and Connelly is one of the forms greatest practitioners, a worthy inheritor of the traditions and grace of Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler.
Considering the terrible cold weve suffered lately, I advise you to cuddle up with these books. (Trust me. I'm a doctor.)
Lets talk about Wambaugh first. Hollywood Moon is the third installment in his series on Hollywood Station, but the first two are not required reading before picking up the latest book. Though the books share the same cast of characters including surfer cops Flotsam and Jetsam and frustrated actor Hollywood Nate it doesnt matter in what order they are read.
These novels all have a narrative arc, but the stories are told as a series of vignettes, glimpses into the alternating monotony and frenzy that is police life. During the sniffing period, two new partners sit side by side and tell each other their resumes. One turns to her partner and says, I love your stories.
And thats how we feel about Wambaugh. He is so comfortable with the form that his books appear to be effortless, the supreme compliment for a writer. He makes it look easy, which means it was anything but. Wambaughs been publishing great crime fiction for 40 years now and seems to be peaking in my view, at least with the Hollywood series. And thats something, considering he wrote The Choirboys and The Blue Knight. (Wambaugh is also gifted with non-fiction. Check out The Onion Field sometime.)
We could also say that Connelly is at some kind of peak, but we seem to say that with every new book. Like Wambaugh, he explores the mean streets of LA, where he worked for a decade as a police reporter for the Los Angeles Times. (Connelly is a Floridian, however, and had the good sense to come back home a decade ago. He lives in the Tampa Bay area.)
Connelly's been publishing for nearly 20 years now.
He started at a high level with The Black Echoand just kept soaring. His usual protagonist has been police detective Harry Bosch, a modern equivalent of Sam Spade or Philip Marlowe. Connelly seems to take us deeper into Boschs soul with each new book and despite the action that propels readers through Nine Dragons and there are at least three oh my God! moments its also a great character study. Weve known Harry for two decades, but each time Connelly gives us a Bosch novel, we find out exactly how complex this guy is.
Don't get the idea, though, that it's just some meditation on a man's character and commitment. It is that, but it also features murders, kidnappings, flights to Hong Kong, and a battle with a gun-shy partner.
Connellys developed several other continuing characters. Mickey Haller (from The Lincoln Lawyer) was center stage for The Brass Verdict 18 months back and reporter Jack McEvoy (from The Poet) made a return appearance last year in Connellys masterful Scarecrow. Bosch made cameo appearances in those books we love the cast of characters floating between his novels but this is the first sustained look at Bosch in a couple of years.
We feel greedy, but the character is so fascinating that we always want more. Critics love Connellys books, but there was an odd rap on him in the New York Times last year: these books are great, the critic said, but theyre coming too fast and furious.
Huh? What the hell is wrong with that? This is one good thing of which we cant get enough.
UPCOMING BOOK EVENTS
James W. Hall, one of Floridas master storytellers, has a new book out and will appear at Haslams Book Store, 2025 Central Ave., St. Petersburg, on Saturday, Jan. 23, at 4:30 p.m. At 2 p.m. the next day, he will appear at Inkwood Books, 216 S. Armenia Ave., Tampa.
The Silencer concerns fathers murder, a sons ruthless betrayal, and how best to honor the land and her resources are at the heart of the new novel by this master of suspense (Publishers Weekly starred review). Hall was a poet in a former life, and his writing reflects that discipline: tight, crisp, unexpected. Vividly evocative of Florida, its landscape as well as its characters, Hall's novels are literary thrillers as well as compulsive page-turners.
Tim Dorsey returns to Inkwood Books for a book talk and signing kicking off the tour for his newest book, Gator A-Go-Go (William Morrow, $24.95), on Thursday, Jan. 28 at 7 p.m. Dorsey will appear at Haslams at 5 p.m. on Jan. 30.
A favorite son of Tampa, Dorsey gives us another tale of his beloved serial killer, Serge. He's back with a Serge-style crashing of the world's biggest Spring Break beach party. Having spent last Spring Break in the company of thousands of obnoxious and vomiting college students, Im looking forward to seeing what happens. Ive just started the book, but will have a full report for you soon.
William McKeen is chairman of the University of Floridas Department of Journalism and author of several books, including the acclaimed Hunter S. Thompson biography Outlaw Journalist, now available in paperback.
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