THE HOURS OF THE VIRGIN by Loren D. Estleman
Grand Central Publishing, August 1, 2000, 336 pages
This is the 14th Amos Walker mystery. Walker, a private eye in Detroit, is a throw-back to the 1930’s – complete with fedora, cigarettes and whiskey - and reminiscent of both Chandler’s Philip Marlowe and Hammett’s Sam Spade - hard working, a keen observer, a perpetual smart-ass and bound to his own morality. The Walker books also resemble Chandler’s and Hammett’s works in that they are multi-layered mysteries – the original case becoming secondary by the conclusion. That being said the series is much more than a cheap knock-off or imitation, the books stand on their own and are well-written and engaging.
The Hours of the Virgin is all of this with a plot-line very similar to The Maltese Falcon. Amos is hired by an art curator to find a stolen religious manuscript and before the reader can say, “… the stuff dreams are made of”, Walker finds himself embroiled in blackmail, adultery, the porn industry and the unsolved 20-year old murder of his former partner. Battling the flu, an attempt on his life and a multitude of lies, Amos forges ahead until he gets to the bottom of the case he was hired for – even if it isn’t what he expected.
If you are a fan of hard-boiled PI mysteries, complex plots, great characters and witty but sarcastic protagonists – you won’t be disappointed with this book or series. No need to read them in chronological order.
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