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Average rating3.2
His first adventure consisted of the search for a rare record; his second the search for a lost child. Specifically the child of Valerian, lead singer of a great rock band of the 1960s, who hanged herself in mysterious circumstances after the boy’s abduction. Along the way, the Vinyl Detective finds himself marked for death, at the wrong end of a shotgun, and unknowingly dosed with LSD as a prelude to being burned alive. And then there’s the grave robbing…
Series
6 primary booksThe Vinyl Detective is a 6-book series with 6 primary works first released in 2016 with contributions by Andrew Cartmel.
Reviews with the most likes.
This originally appeared at The Irresponsible Reader.
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N. B.: The Narrator of this series (so far, anyway) is unnamed. I find it tiresome to keep saying “The Narrator” or “our protagonist” (as I did with the last book.). So, I'm just going to call him “VD” from now until Cartmel gives him a name—as unfortunate as those initials may be.
WHAT'S THE RUN-OUT GROOVE ABOUT?
In the late 60s, there was a band of some repute (not all stellar) with a lead vocalist, Valerian, with an otherworldly voice. A lot of self-destructive tendencies, too, but what a voice. As too many things in that era went, Valerian's lifestyle spiral out of control and she killed herself following the disappearance/kidnapping of her infant child.
In the present time, VD and his girlfriend, Nevada, are approached by a bickering duo. She's working on a book about Valerian and he's Valerian's estranged brother. Given VD”s success with the hunt for the record (as seen in the previous novel), they've come to him. But it's not just music they want VD to find—but the child.
Urban Legend has it that there's a clue hidden on a 45 released shortly before her death—but only a few were sold and are out there in the world. It's nearly impossible to find. Well, nearly impossible for people who aren't VD or his friends. So that's the jumping-off point—look into the people who remember Valerian, who were in her inner circle, while trying to track down a copy of one of the handful of 45s.
From there things go as you'd predict for a mystery novel—there are threats, some violence, some drugs (although some were ingested willingly), and the uncovering of many secrets.
AN INHERENTLY LIKEABLE SERIES
The appeal to this series comes down to the characters—primarily VD. With him you've got a full-on geek, sitting around and indulging his passion and writing about it while drinking expensive gourmet coffee and spending time with his girlfriend and cats. It's hard to see that as anything but a fantasy for most readers—replace jazz records with books and cats with the superior pet, and that's my ideal life. Getting paid ridiculous sums to look into something related to—and somewhat involving—your hobby is just icing on the cake.
Because of this, I think there's an inherently likable quality to this protagonist. He's living a life that most of us want and seems to be unspoiled by it. Your choices are either to be envious or want to be his friend—and since he seems like such a nice guy, it's easy to pick “friend” and hang out with him to hear his stories.
A PARTICULAR WEAKNESS
“...I've got a copy of Graves's book somewhere. No wait, damn it, I lent it to Clean Head. It was a Penguin edition. That's why I haven't got it back. You have to watch that girl. She's very nice and all that but she will steal your Penguin paperbacks. She has a particular weakness for the Penguin Modern Classics series. It's a character defect.”
Minor Spoiler Alert!
THE RUN-OUT GROOVE
The Run-Out Groove
Written in Dead Wax
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