REVIEWED BY BARRY GARDNER:


ROBERT J. RANDISI – Hard Look. Miles Jacoby #5. Walker, hardcover, May 1993. No paperback edition.

ROBERT J. RANDISI Hard Look

   Miles Jacoby owns a bar, now, after the death of his friend Packy, who willed it to him. He’s still a PI, though, and heads to Florida when a man shows him a postcard with the rear view of a fit and attractive young woman, and says it’s his missing wife.

   The Mets are out of the playoffs, so why not? Then a man he had spotted following him in New York turns up dead in Tampa — in Jacoby’s hotel room. The ops are unhappy, ans so is Jacoby. Obviously, there’s a bit more to the case than a missing wife.

   Randisi is getting better and more assured with his writing in each book. I haven’t liked the Jacoby books as well as the Brooklyn series with Nick Delvecchio, but I enjoyed this one considerably.

   Randisi’s strengths are the likability of his characters and a very smooth narrative flow. The overall plot wasn’t bad, but I wish Randisi — and a number of other PI writers — would quit working cops into their stories in totally unrealistic ways.

   Here, Jacoby and a cute, young, female Deputy hit it off rather well, and she chases around with him the rest of the book, flashing her badge at appropriate times to help him out. Bullshit. It’s just lazy plotting, and he’s better than that.

— Reprinted from Ah, Sweet Mysteries #8, July 1993.