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S**S
Ten stars if such rating would have existed
REVIEW WAS ORIGINALLY POSTED AT JESSEWAVE'S BLOG, I PURCHASED THE BOOK ON MY OWN HOWEVERFirst and foremost I would like to say that I think the blurb is perfect. It gives you the initial set up of the mystery, briefly reminds the readers that those books are well known and that's about it. I liked it.I discovered these books from Teddy Pig's blog. I bought the first book in paperback, realized that there is a complete collection in one book, quickly bought it for a very decent price on Amazon. Now the complete edition seems to be out of print, and of course third party sellers charge crazy prices, but the separate books are available in paperback on Amazon. The first two books are also available as ebooks directly from the publisher and apparently on Nook and Cobo as well, but not on Amazon. I hope the whole series will be reissued for Kindle one day, I really do.I actually did not start reading this book for a very long time. You know how you have heard so much about a book and you are afraid to be disappointed? Well, needless to say I was not disappointed at all. The book sucked me in from the very first passage, literally."Fog shrouded the canyon, a box canyon above a California ranch town called Pima. It rained. Not hard but steady and gray and dismal. Shaggy pines loomed through the mist like threats. Sycamores made white, twisted gestures above the arroyo. Down the arroyo water pounded, ugly, angry and deep. The road shattered the arroyo. It was a bad road. The rain had chewed its edges. There were holes. Mud and rock half buried it in places. It was steep and winding and there were no guard rails.He drove it with sweating hands. Why? His smile was sour. Why so careful? Wasn't death all he'd wanted for the past six weeks? His mouth tightened. That was finished. He'd made up his mind to live now. Hadn't he? Live and forget - at least until he could remember without pain. And that would happen someday. Sure it would. All the books said so. The sum of human wisdom. Meantime, he was working again".I do not know about you, but these introductory passages transported me right away into this bleak landscape and portrayed a strong person who is almost overwhelmed by grief and still fights hard to not be completely overwhelmed to the point of no return. I could not stop reading.I am sure you understood when you saw the grade that this whole review is not a critical one, but I just cannot help myself, with every introduction of new characters, with every twist and turn in the plot I could not help but think - this is one of the best executions of this thing and this thing, and this one again. Of course by now I have read enough gay romances, gay romantic mysteries and other subgenres with gay protagonists, so some ideas felt familiar, but as I said I just felt that Joseph Hansen wrote pretty much a perfect story and I had to keep reminding myself that as blurb stated he wrote it more than thirty years ago.For example, when we meet Dave, we are not treated to a long and boring exposition as to how he looks and what happened in his past, instead the passage I quoted previously already sets up his mood and actually an overall bleak mood for the whole story very well. When Dave interviews one of the witnesses, we are given some details of his appearance and age and some things which come up during the interview make his mind wander and we learn something more about his past. I thought it was really well done.I really liked how his character was revealed more and more throughout the investigation, throughout his actions, not just through his thoughts. I liked how we slowly learned how strong he is, how very compassionate he is and I really liked his sense of humor in those few situations when Dave actually showed it to the reader. I also thought that while the story is of course a mystery first and foremost, the love story in his past is one of the most beautiful and poignant that I have ever read about in this genre, period. Unfortunately I grew to think that when in a mm book protagonist recalls the love story in his past, I would be bound to feel emotionally removed from the story. Boy was I wrong here, because emotionally removed from what Dave was remembering was so NOT what I was feeling. I was so very sad for him, but also happy that he had such a great love in his past.The mystery he investigated seemed simple enough, but it was not predictable at all, not for me anyway. It was very well paced and I could not guess the villain or the result of the investigation. I thought that each and every one of the characters no matter how secondary they were in the story were acting believably and realistically, close to how I thought real people would act in those situations. I also think that in a sense the mystery went a little bit off the given path, because while Dave managed to catch the killer, in a sense he failed; without talking spoilers here, he fell to achieve the goal which he had when he just started his investigation. Those of you who have read or will read the story will know what I am talking about.I also really enjoyed that despite the overall bleak atmosphere, things ended on somewhat hopeful note for Dave and cannot wait to read a second book.Highly recommended
B**Y
A Classic
Knowing this book is a gay mystery classic, and having read glowing reviews, I couldn't wait to dive in. I had mixed feelings throughout the novel.Typically, I like an old-fashioned hard-boiled detective, but I think I was expecting more from Dave. I thought he'd have more personality. Though disappointing, the positive is that Hansen didn't make a big deal of Dave being gay. Dave was just Dave - a hard-boiled detective who happened to be gay.What disappointed me most were the other characters. Through much of the book I had a challenging time keeping track of who's who because none of them seemed to have any distinct personality. Just a group of people living a passion free life...kind of like Dave came across at first.Once the mystery picked up, I had an easier time keeping track of individuals and enjoyed the book. Unfortunately, that wasn't until about the halfway point. But, pick up it did, and it made for an enjoyable read.I've seen other reviews say this book is dated and I disagree. Nothing is further from the truth. Sure, there are hippies, they call the police "The fuzz," people use payphones and stenotype machines, but that doesn't make the book dated. If someone today wrote this novel it would be seen as a period piece. To me, outdated implies the style of writing. Fadeout is as fresh today as it was in 1970. I didn't feel like I was struggling like I would with an old Victorian novel.I staggered between rating this a 3 or 4 and went with 4. The mystery picked up, I didn't figure it out, and I grew to like Dave. I also gave it an added star out of respect for its history. It was a pleasure to read a novel from that era where the gay lead didn't act like an absurd stereotype or died. Dave was just gay, plain, and simple.I will be reading more novels in the series.
D**E
Probably would have been a blockbuster if written 30 years later
Hansen's mysteries feature a male gay detective and were written too early to meet mainstream success. This is the first in the series and it is well worth seeking out. It is taut, economical and I was quickly drawn into the story. I looked for a way to find the next book in the series as soon as finished this one . Strongly recommended.
G**M
Good Read
Very good mystery, very good book, kept me interested through out and I'll be buying the rest for sure.Definitely worth a read!
R**H
Groundbreaking at the time of publishing (1970) - a gay detective!
Succinctly written with snappy dialogue. Would have made a great black & white film noir.
L**S
The start of a beautiful friendship
Josh Layton mentioned this author and his series and I am in love with both. A great read. Go for it.
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