Walking the Perfect Square

Walking the Perfect Square

2002 • 230 pages

Ratings3

Average rating3.3

15

This originally appeared at The Irresponsible Reader.


Moe Prager is waiting to call his daughter on her birthday, but before he can do that he answers a phone call that may lead him to solving an old missing persons case. It's a case that he investigated twenty years previously, shortly after an injury forced his retirement from the NYPD. We spend most of the novel in the 70's, with brief looks at Prager's present, tracing his work on the case.

As a mystery novel, it's okay. Nothing special, but it kept my attention, kept me guessing, and was entertaining enough. Which is a decent start for a series. By the end, I'd really started to enjoy Prager and wanted to see where he goes from here – either the 70's or 90's (although I'm pretty sure the series sticks with the latter).

Stylistically, this was pretty cool. Though published in the early 2000's, the flashback segments feel like they could've been written in the 1970's/80's. The present day material felt like it was written in the late 1990's, and yet they were definitely of a piece. I'm very impressed that he pulled that off.

The last few paragraphs turned this from a decent mystery novel into a really good one – and if my mood had been a bit different at the time, they could've earned it a 4-start rating. The ending really does elevate the whole – while it sends you reeling from a serious gut punch.

I really should've gotten back to this series, but I didn't want to color my take on him as he started his tenure with Jesse Stone – but that's passed now, time to get busy.

April 23, 2014Report this review