Sat 19 May 2018
A PI Review by LJ Roberts: CHRIS KNOPF – Tango Down.
Posted by Steve under Bibliographies, Lists & Checklists , Characters , Reviews[4] Comments
Reviews by L. J. Roberts
CHRIS KNOPF – Tango Down. PI Sam Acquillo #8. The Permanent Press, hardcover, December 2017. Setting: Long island NY (The Hamptons).
First Sentence: I was trying to maneuver my way across the muddy construction site when Frank Entwhistle ran up to my old Jeep Cherokee and slapped on the windshield.
Sam Acquillo has been building cabinets for the new home of wealthy New Yorker Victor Bollings. When Bollings’ body is found on the job site, Colombian illegal Ernesto Mazzoti, a finish carpenter and Sam’s friend, is arrested as the obvious suspect. The murder weapon contains Ernesto’s fingerprints, but Sam isn’t buying it. With the help of Jackie Swaitkowski, a defense attorney who, courtesy of billionaire Burton Lewis, takes the cases of those who can’t afford to pay, Sam works to prove Ernesto innocent.
It is nice when an author starts straight in with the crime. Sam is a great character with a fascinating background and unexpected skills. Just when his machismo starts becoming a bit strong, it is tempered by his caring for others. His lover, Amada, and dog, Eddie Van Halen, round out the character nicely. It is also nice that Knopf’s writing is wonderfully intelligent and that he provides a good sense of Eastern Long Island with its marked contrast between the extremely wealthy, primarily summer people, and the working-class people who live there year-round.
A well-done metaphor is always a pleasure to read— “Then I used a few other traditional calibrating tools to reset the table saw. … The result was perfect and true, like the heart of a young lover before disappointment upends her soul.â€
The story line of undocumented workers couldn’t be more timely or accurate. That the investigation involves multiple agencies, and a jaunt to the Virgin Islands adds dimensions to the story. So too is that of the issue with which Amanda is dealing which is emotional and adds yet another layer to the plot as well as the characters.
Tango Down is intelligent, complex, multi-layered, and has a realistic ending. It is also really, really good; it is always surprising that Knopf is not more widely known and read.
The Sam Acquillo series —
1. The Last Refuge (2005)
2. Two Time (2005)
3. Head Wounds (2008)
4. Hardstop (2009)
5. Black Swan (2011)
6. Cop Job (2015)
7. Back Lash (2016)
8. Tango Down (2017)
Note: Attorney Jackie Swaitkowski has her own series of books (so far) as does another of Knopf’s series characters, Arthur Cathcart, “market researcher and occasional finder of missing persons”
May 19th, 2018 at 3:02 pm
LJ is quite correct in her last sentence. Chris Knopf is an author totally new to me, and his books look as though they’re very much worth looking for.
May 19th, 2018 at 7:35 pm
Sounds worth tipping a toe in. Thanks, I’ll check him out.
May 20th, 2018 at 6:53 am
Bill Crider was a big fan of Knopf’s books, and frequently reviewed them on his blog. The Arthur Cathcart series (highly recommended by Bill) begins with a bang, almost literally, in DEAD ANYWAY. Cathcart comes home to find a man with a gun at his wife’s head, demanding that she sign some papers. After she does, he shoots her in the head anyway (no spoiler, this is chapter one), then shoots Cathcart, who obviously survives (or there would be no series). Since he is presumed dead, he has his sister get him declared legally dead, so he can hide while he tries to find out what the heck is going on.
It’s great stuff, and I’ve been meaning to try the other series too. The other Cathcart titles so far are CRIES OF THE LOST and A BILLION WAYS TO DIE.
May 20th, 2018 at 9:58 am
I *am* going to have to look for that one. Thanks, Jeff!