About
a third of the way through 2018, Steve Mertz turned his considerable
writing talents back to the private genre, where he first began with
SOME DIE HARD circa 1979. Since then, of course, his byline has
become widely recognized and acclaimed in the field of Men's Action,
notably penning what many consider some of the best entries in Don
Pendleton's hugely popular Mack Bolan, Executioner series.
Steve also created his own successful Mark Stone, MIA
series and has additionally done praiseworthy work in the categories
of horror, thriller, Western, and stand-alone mysteries.
But
the circle was closed in 2018 with the release of two hardboiled
private eye mysteries. One was SAY IT WAS MURDER, featuring
contemporary, Southwest-based McShan (more on that at another time).
The other was COLD IN THE GRAVE, featuring Denver-based Kilroy and
set in the 1970s (covered on this blog in May of '18). Both PIs were
engaging and distinct, and both books were totally satisfying. I, for
one, was anxiously hoping we would be seeing a lot more of both.
Well,
earlier this year, at least part of that wish was fulfilled. In
January, Wolfpack Publishing released the second and third entries in
the Kilroy series – THE DEVIL'S MUSIC and SWEET BLACKMAIL. Kilroy
was (is) back! And these latest titles are just as entertaining and
satisfying as his initial appearance. “A tough private eye who
wears his heart on his sleeve and a .44 Colt in his shoulder
holster!” proclaims the cover blurbs for each. And that's a fair
enough thumbnail sketch of the single-monickered Kilroy, a bearded,
long-haired, quasi-laid back Vietnam vet who doesn't go looking for
trouble (except other people's, the kind he can try to help them out
of) yet is plenty capable of handling any that comes his way.
THE
DEVIL'S MUSIC may be the best (or at least my favorite) Kilroy so
far. It involves an old blues singer attempting to make a comeback
after being missing (and presumed dead, by many) for several years.
When it becomes evident there are forces at work who don't want
this comeback to take place, even to the point of making the artist's
presumed death a fact, Kiloy steps aboard both to protect him and to
try and get to the bottom of who's out to get him. The mystery
element is solid and the suspects and other characters are colorful
and well drawn. What gives DEVIL'S MUSIC something extra, though, is
the blues music background that the author is so obviously fond of
and captures so accurately and lovingly. A musician himself, Steve
has written other acclaimed works with a music background (HANK AND
MUDDY, JIMI AFTER MIDNIGHT) and his deep appreciation for the music
and those who live it also shone through – as it does here.
SWEET
BLACKMAIL starts out with one of the niftiest, most reader-grabbing
sequences I've come across in a long time: A mysterious woman
walks into a restaurant where Kilroy is eating, throws an envelope
full of money down in front of him, declaring that's all the
money he's going to get and she knew how to play rough, too, if she
had to. To emphasize the point, she then pulls out a .22 and fires a
few shots in the air before turning and departing. When Kilroy
attempts to give chase, he collides wih another customer just
entering the restaurant. This slows Kilroy down enough to miss
catching up with the mystery woman and when he returns to the diner,
he finds the man he bumped into lying dead with a knife wound in his
back ... Now, is anybody going to tell me you wouldn't keep
reading after that? Naturally, you would. And what you would then
enter into is a twisty tale of blackmail (obviously, as stated by the
title), mistaken identity, betrayal, more killing, some sexy
distraction, and various other obstacles for Kilroy to overcome, not
the least of which is DA Dickensheets who longs for any chance to
yank the private eye's license. In the end, of course, Kilroy figures
it all out and keeps his license for the sake, hopefully, of showing
up in more adventures.
The
final verdict on this fine series is that it ranks right up there
with some of the best in the genre. Kilroy is an engaging
protagonist, Mertz's writing is straightforward and sharp –
painting vivid action scenes, offering poignant insight, and
capturing all the right details for Denver, circa the 1970s. If
you're a fan of hardboiled PI tales with clever mystery twists told
against a somewhat different setting, don't miss these. Strongly
recommended.