REVIEWED BY BARRY GARDNER:

   
JEROME DOOLITTLE – Half Nelson. Tom Bethany #5. Pocket, hardcover, 1994; paperback, 1995.

   I missed the fourth of Doolitttle’s tales of would-have-been-Olympic-wrestler-except-for-Carter’s-boycott, ex-pilot, now sort of PI Bethany, but fortunately these don’t require reading in strict sequence.

   Bethany is at a Harvard gathering as his lover Hope’s request, to meet with a save-the-trees environmentalist who has received death threats by mail. He’s not able to help the man much, who flies back to Oregon to go about his business. When shots are fired at his house there, however, Bethany packs up and heads West to see what he can do.

   The situation worsens drastically, and before it’s done Bethany is head-to-head against both Big Business and the FBI, and there have been more deaths than one.

   I like Doolittle’s writing, and I like the not-in-the-data-banks character of Bethany, so I like the books. I have a weakness for one-man-against-the-system (damn, there’s a lot of hyphens in this review) stories, and that’s basically what these always are.

   Doolittle is a good storyteller. What I don’t like is the unrelentingly liberal bias against business and authority in any form. Life just isn’t that simple, Jerome, however comforting it might be to think so. It’s still a damned good read, though.

— Reprinted from Ah Sweet Mysteries #14, August 1994.

Editorial Comment:   My review of Body Scissors, the first of the Tom Bethany books, appears here. There were six in the series in all. A complete list follows that earlier review.