The curse of all
long-running series is that the writer can get as tired of writing them as
his readers are of reading them. Max Collins' massive and masterful
Nathan Heller series is the exception and if you don't believe me I invite you
to read his richest and most powerful Heller yet.
I say this because
for older Americans the most unforgettable shared memory, even including the
walk on the moon, was the terrible day John Kennedy was assassinated. Where
were you? What were you doing? How did you spend the rest of the day?
Many of us can count off that day by the second. We were in
emotional and spiritual free fall.
In the words of Mark
Lane's famous book RUSH TO JUDGEMENT there was an official and frenzied
determination to blame Lee Harvey Oswald and shut the subject down. The onerous
Warren Commission smugly attempted to do this by discrediting anyone who
disagreed with its conclusion.
I've never been much
for conspiracies. With the JFK assassination I've always tried to keep an open
mind. While I thought the Warren Commission was pure public relations for a
government eager to change the subject most of the contrary theories struck me
as loopy.
This novel has
changed my mind.
First of all there's
the premise. While ultimately the subject is JFK's murder Collins foregoes all
the standard tropes by taking us to Chicago before the fatal day.
Chicago? Huh? Well few
names resonate in our history books like that of Jack Ruby, who turns up when
an old friend asks Nathan Heller to help him make a money drop. Something
ominous is going on with The Outfit, of which Ruby is a marginal member, and the
friend feels he needs protection. And who better to hire than Nathan
Heller?
Thus
we are led into
a Richard Condonesque novel of plot and counterplot with thugs as well known as
Jimmy Hoffa and Sam Giancana and entities as supposedly respectable as The
Secret Service.
You see there
really was a plot to murder JFK on one of his trips to Chicago and Collins lays
it out perfectly. Since some of the same names came up in the Dallas murder was
there a connection to this earlier plan?
Collins'
storytelling skills have never been stronger. TARGET LANCER is pure page
turner but told with far greater style and finesse than with most page turners
and buttressed with a spellbinding history of the era as well as the conspiracy
itself. And Collins has wrought subtle changes in Heller who is older now, no
less hard nose, but more introspective and open to nuance.
This novel
should run the tables. Edgar, Shamus, Anthony and all the rest. It should also
win Nathan Heller a large number of new readers.
1 comment:
Well, hell, sign me up!
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