Double Take

Double Take

2021 • 336 pages

Ratings1

Average rating4.5

15

This originally appeared at The Irresponsible Reader.

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Five days was an eternity with a missing person; forty-eight or even seventy-two hours was the cut-off for a good chance of finding the person alive. But five days was still something to work with. Madison could help bring another person safely home. Finding someone who was kidnapped or lost or just needed help to get home was so fulfilling, it was like having a life’s purpose she’d never known she'd been without.

WHAT'S DOUBLE TAKE ABOUT?

Madison is approached by Travis, the desperate boyfriend of Barrett Brown, a reporter for an almost impossibly-small newspaper who's been missing for five days. He's afraid she's been abducted, he's afraid she's being tortured or worse, and is about to die.

Madison is dealing with some medical issues and just finished a case that took her out of state, but how can she possibly leave this to the police (who don't seem to believe that Barrett didn't just ghost Travis)? So she jumps into action—retracing Barrett's steps, figuring out what story she was working on—assuming that's the reason she's missing.

This leads Madison down a twisty path into a criminal conspiracy that she can only see the barest outlines of—and might end up leading her into grave danger.

While she's searching, Madison has to deal with someone having her followed, the aforementioned medical issues, and a truly inconvenient spark of attraction between her and Travis. Who might not be the great boyfriend he gives the initial impression of being.

MY ALMA MATER

Chapter One takes place on the campus of the University of Idaho—so you know Breck gets extra points from me for that. Would've been an easy 5-Star read if the whole book had taken place there—or at least most of it.

But no, Madison has to go home to San Diego—sure, it's hard to blame her, San Diego in October has got to be more pleasant—wrecking my hope for a PI novel on campus.

MADISON'S DEVELOPMENT

After the events of Anonymous, Madison's picked up some notoriety—she's become a go-to for missing persons. This is great, she'd been bemoaning how all she'd been doing was insurance work in Anonymous, and it wasn't that fulfilling—but as we see in the above quotation, she's finding satisfaction in her work. It's also nice to see that she's getting some attention, you frequently get the idea in P.I. fiction that the work is largely unseen.

Another departure from the norm is that Madison's monetarily successful at the moment—the typical PI is scraping by. Not Madison—at least not now.

The focus on missing persons reminded me of Elvis Cole, just up the coast from Madison—but despite some wealthy clients, you don't get the idea that he's as successful. He definitely doesn't seem to get the notoriety. So, I guess I have to update my one sentence description of Madison from being "Kinsey Millhone for today" to add "with an Elvis Cole twist."

It's good that she's got money coming in, because this self-employed, and likely under-insured woman has medical bills. I wasn't sure what to think of the discussion of Madison's past cancer in the first book, but seeing it here, I'm seeing what Beck's intention is and I like the way it gives the character another dimension and unconsciously (sometimes, anyway) shapes her actions.

MADISON AND BARRETT

One of the ways you can see the appropriateness of the title is that from the first conversation with Travis, Madison starts noting all the coincidental parallels between what's she's told about Barrett and what she knows about herself. This can go one of two ways, typically—either this becomes a large hurdle for the protagonist doing their job, or it's a motivator. This largely serves as a motivation—but it also causes a couple of problems for Madison—at most it's a distraction occasionally.

It's arguable that she gets invested pretty quickly because of the parallels, but not by much. Also, Breck finds a way to use this sense of them being so similar in both a positive and negative way for Madison—and then adds a new layer to this later in the book. It didn't go the way I expected, fully, but I appreciated it.

SO, WHAT DID I THINK ABOUT DOUBLE TAKE?

I was pretty enthusiastic about Anyonymous, and this cemented my initial impression of Breck and Madison. I was enjoying this the entire time, but toward the end, Beck shifts into high gear and...wow. It's the kind of ending where you find yourself leaning forward as you read, because somehow that helps you get to what happens next faster; you don't hear the music/people/animals around you; and your eyes move just too slowly. Okay, maybe I'm exaggerating there, but woe betide anyone who attempted to distract me during the last quarter or so of the book.

This is a fast-paced book. The main action starts Monday evening and ends in the pre-dawn on Friday. In that time, Madison has to find a missing (hopefully still alive woman), figure out why she's missing/abducted (which leads to a larger criminal act), deal with some personal (some of which should have been dealt with already) and medical issues—and maybe catch a wink or two of sleep. All that in a short amount of time helps explain a couple of the blunders she makes—but those help ground and humanize her, so who cares about them? Especially the way Breck uses those mistakes.

And, hey, she still quotes Nero Wolfe twice. University of Idaho and Wolfe quotations—it's really like Elizabeth Breck wrote this for me. A delusional thought, I realize, but I like my delusions.

I do wish Breck had made it a little more difficult for the reader to see the things that Madison didn't/put together. I get why she did that, and it was probably the right move, but I still would've preferred to work a little harder. That's the sole issue I have with Double Take, and who knows, any other day, I might have considered that a feature instead of a bug.

Even if you're not me, if you're a fan of P.I. novels, I don't see how this novel/author/character/series doesn't appeal to you. Madison's tough, smart, lucky (and knows how important that is), and committed. Brisk and assured writing. A nice bit of sleuthing to find a pretty clever crime (committed by some people who really shouldn't ever get into criminal activity—and some who seem born to it). My only regret is that I have to wait for the third book in this series to be published before I can dive in.

Originally posted at irresponsiblereader.com.

March 24, 2022Report this review