Ratings7
Average rating4
This originally appeared at The Irresponsible Reader.
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At the end of Righteous, Isaiah meets a girl – I don't remember much about it, but there's something about here that clearly makes an impression on IQ – and his dog. It was enough to give us a little hope for our intrepid hero after everything he'd just gone through as we wrapped up the book. This book starts with the three of them bumping into each other again – this time IQ definitely is attracted to her and his dog and the woman clearly enjoy each other's company. Which is great for them, but you feel a little bad for Isaiah.
Before long, Grace comes to Isaiah with a case. Her mother disappeared a decade ago – under a cloud, it should be added – and Grace saw her on the street near her home. Can Isaiah find her? She's a painter trying to get a start and really can't afford much – but gives him a painting as payment.
The catch is, Isaiah and Dodson have recently become partners and Dodson is determined to make Isaiah's business legitimate. They've got a web presence, a Facebook page, and a strict policy on minimum fees. These fees have to be money. No lawn care services, cooking, et cetera. Dodson has a wife and child to provide for and he is inflexible on this point. Isaiah makes an exception and ignores Dodson's complaints, once Dodson figures out Isaiah's motivation to take the case, he acquiesces – like a good friend would.
What makes this case complicated is that Sarah, Grace's mom, is trying to blackmail some very dangerous people. It takes a long time for us to get all the details behind the blackmailing (it's absolutely worth the wait, and Ide does a great job revealing things to us in drips), but what's important isn't the why – it's the reaction to the blackmail. Isaiah, Dodson and their clients have been in dangerous and tough spots before – but I promise you, those pale in comparison to this. These people bring a level of danger, a level of callousness, a level of professionalism, that will demand more from Isaiah than he's used to – and he'll have to find new ways to approach things to survive.
Meanwhile, there's another blackmail story afoot. One of the darkest episodes of the partners' (and Deronda's) past comes back to bite them – a criminal act that they've gotten away with, primarily because no one knew they got away with anything. Somehow, word has gotten out, and someone wants money from them to stop him from going public with what he knows. If the victims of this crime – a couple of notorious drug dealers – find out, it will likely prove fatal. Dodson attempts to take care of this on his own, with a little help from Deronda.
Clearly, the partnership isn't off to the strongest start.
There is a drink described here – not that anyone you're supposed to like drinks it – that is possibly the most disgusting thing I've read this year, it's a mix of vodka, Coke, and things that shouldn't be consumed with each other. There are scenes of physical violence and torture in this book, horrible things really, but it's Parks Punch that left scars.
Actually, there is something more painful, now that I think of it. Junior, one of the drug dealers that IQ, Dodson, and Deronda stole from before years ago appears frequently. He's got the right idea – a better vocabulary can be tied to greater success in business and life in general. Sadly, Junior is better at acquiring words than he is using them. Resulting in sentences like:
My domicile has been exfoliated! Excavate the premises!
Did you discover anything irrelevant?
IQ
Righteous
Wrecked
IQ
Righteous
IQ
Ide has a great ability for pace. You may consider this as page turner than you return often to find out what happens next. But he has also developed good characters and an overall “hard-boiled” feeling set firmly in this 21st century that makes it superior kind of crime thriller rather than a “whodunnit” (you know who the baddies are pretty much from day 1.