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Rating:  Summary: I am a kid again Review: I am a kid again when I read Robert Skinner, which is why I truly recommend Pale Shadow, the fifth novel in his crime series featuring Wesley Farrell of New Orleans. I'm breathless and at the edge of my seat as a gunman "reached down and jacked a cartridge into the breech of his .45. The metallic clash was like the crack of doom in the dim room."I am a longtime devotee of Wesley Farrell, a professional gambler, a nightclub owner on Basin Street, and (by nature) an alley cat given to prowling the mean streets of New Orleans. This time out, Farrell seeks to help out an old friend Luiz Martinez whose mother is dying of lung cancer in El Paso. Farrell and Martinez go back a long ways, back to Prohibition when both worked with rum-runners. Martinez was "a Texan by birth, a mixture of Mexican, Indian and Negro that they called mestizo in Old Mexico." Even then Farrell respected Martinez: "He had the kind of brains that criminals rarely have, the kind that keep you out of alive, out of jail, and with enough money to last beyond the next week." Martinez is a guy whose ex-girlfriends shed tears when they remember how good they used to have it together. Farrell learned enough in his night work that he began smuggling liquor on his own. In the dozen times since then that he had seen Martinez, his friend "had had some kind of new racket, and had been doing well with it." What Farrell doesn't know is Martinez has stolen a perfect set of counterfeit plates and the bad guys are after his buddy. Martinez, on the other hand, knows the score. Going to the cops meant time behind bars. Returning the plates was an admission of defeat and submission to execution. "All that was left was to make war." The situation Farrell has stumbled into -- a band of counterfeiters out to kill the renegade Martinez -- can leave Farrell and his buddy as roadkill. Farrell's fight to save his friend is tooth and claw to the bittersweet end. Farrell has to find his friend before the evildoers do. Dixie Ray Chavez, the hired killer out to beat Farrell, tells his bosses, "Martinez has three friends in New Orleans. I'm bettin' he'll go to one of `em for help, sooner or later." Who gets there first gets to shoot first. Chavez is one mean dude. He tortures one friend of Martinez "with a hot iron `til her heart gave out." On another victim, "it looked as though skin had been flayed from her." Dixie Ray Chavez is a tuning fork for other bad guys to home in on. He "liked to think of himself as a bullet who stayed on course until the job was done." Chavez plans to be there before Farrell and gone before the Treasury agents stumble in. Farrell and Pale Shadow are fun for all Farrell's secrets, the most important being that he is Creole and passing for white in a racist society. His next best secret is his close relationship with his father, Frank Casey, a red-headed Irish cop ready to retire from the New Orleans Police department. Skinner has written four previous Wesley Farrell novels and four nonfiction books about the hard--boiled detective tradition. He is actually a well-respected academic at Xavier University in New Orleans. Pale Shadow takes place during September, 1940, in New Orleans, when the Negro Detective Squad covered the crimes the white guys won't and backed off the "white" cases. A time for riverboat gambling. A time when "a well-dressed man with a slick line of jive" can go a long way. The counterfeiters are pros: "The engraving technique is so good that the Bureau of Engraving and Printing is jealous. And the paper is good enough to fool ninety-seven percent of the people who touch it." No all cops in Pale Shadow are good guys, either, which surprises no one who knows New Orleans and its histories. "If there had existed in Detective Matty Paret even a scintilla of honesty, he might have been an outstanding detective. He was intelligent, thoughtful, and even possessed a certain shrewd insight into the foibles of his fellow man. Had he liked money a little less and hard work more, he'd have been a sergeant already." I envelope myself in this mythical past of crooked cops, honest robbers and the gray people who slide between them like a sharpened knife edge. I luxuriate in the world I am too young to have ever been a party to, a world I most likely would never have survived within, a world that helps me deal the real, everyday villains on the front page and the cable headlines. Wesley Farrell is a questionable hero in the same way that the 1930 and 1940 movies celebrated questionable heroes with actors like Humphrey Bogart, Dick Powell, and Bob Mitchum. Skinner writes, "Farrell moved silently through the crowd, his eyes glowing in that peculiar way from the shadow of his hat brim. Occasionally somebody felt the feral quality emanating from him and stepped to the side, hurriedly dragging a companion from Farrell's path." Locals whisper his name when he passes. Wes Farrell has that classic tenuous relationship with the cops, too. He has some friends, but even his friends suspect there's much wisdom percolating behind his mulatto features. Yes, Wesley Farrell is biracial. So few writers are multicultural, and yet this world grows more so every day. True cities like New Orleans have always been multicultural -- although that phrase is still rings new to the city and the world -- and yet Farrell is not part of that 1940s racist past. In the real 1940s Farrell's story would have been played out as another Example of the Tragic Mulatto, or worse the Tragic Half-breed. (Think of Paul Newman playing Elmore Leonard's Hombre; a man so marginalized, he isn't allowed a name until after he dies saving all the whites.) Farrell passes for white, and many call him "the great white hope, Wes Farrell, who reaches down to help all the poor, helpless niggers in distress." Farrell generally pulls off the masquerade, but not all the times. "Men never asked him why he did the things he did. It was always the women who tried to understand, who wanted an explanation for why he behaved in ways that were inexplicable in a white man." Skinner gives these denizens of New Orleans the wonderful names that 1940s crime novels thrive upon: Wisteroa Mullins, Little Head Lucas, cheap thugs named Tink and Rojo, Margaret "Jelly" Wilde, Marcel Aristide and Theron Oswald. I love this world where bodyguards and bouncers can be murdered silently in the night, this frontier of hard-boiled and noir. Where cons talk of "dumb twists," cons mumble about `ofays," where only four aces always win. A world that of course includes classic femme fatales: "She was tall, maybe five-seven, with a lean, high-breasted figure and velvety skin the color of hark honey." She has a devastating effect on men, too. Even men hard as rock get goofy; "he had the insane urge to race around the room on all fours while he barked the lyrics to `Jingle Bells.'" These are dangerous women. One of Skinner's gloriously described femmes owns and operates Sparrow's Joint, a most curious night club down along the riverfront warehouses. "Her sallow skin and bold, handsome features were those of a Jew or an Arab, Farrell had never known which." Sparrow tells Farrell, "I'll simply tell you to be careful. The other side of the world is on fire now, but evil energy is in the air even here." Skinner doesn't over-furnish the 1940s. We get just enough to locate us in that special time and place. A man might wear "a carefully trimmed mustache" and "a stylish Wilton fedora tipped over his right ear." Another has a collarless shirt and thick glasses made of window glass. A neon sign has the colorful shape of "a top-hatted crawdish leaning negligently against a martini glass." Drinkers toss down rye highballs in juke joints. Where men keep bottles of whiskey and Colt .38 Supers in their suitcases. Pale Shadow unfolds like a movie, and I love watching as "Farrell moved through the noise and destruction like a hot wind, his rage and blood lust blotting out all but the faceless shadow that retreated down toward the opposite end of the building. His gun jumped in his hand until the hammer fell on an empty chamber." I love the town that Skinner loves. New Orleans is a border town between the races. More complex than a love affair, and more shifting than standing on quicksand. "The center of New Orleans was beating like a healthy heart, and the death of a Negro woman in Gentilly meant little or nothing to the teeming life of Rampart Street." Meanwhile, at the bordello, one can hear the bells at Holy Ghost Catholic Church. We may want to visit Maxwell's Chicken Shack on Derbigny Street or the Sassafrass Lounge for an matinee drink. Pale Shadow is great fun. It's fun to watch how Skinner makes sure all the interested parties keep abreast of exposition. Pale S
Rating:  Summary: I am a kid again Review: I am a kid again when I read Robert Skinner, which is why I truly recommend Pale Shadow, the fifth novel in his crime series featuring Wesley Farrell of New Orleans. I'm breathless and at the edge of my seat as a gunman "reached down and jacked a cartridge into the breech of his .45. The metallic clash was like the crack of doom in the dim room." I am a longtime devotee of Wesley Farrell, a professional gambler, a nightclub owner on Basin Street, and (by nature) an alley cat given to prowling the mean streets of New Orleans. This time out, Farrell seeks to help out an old friend Luiz Martinez whose mother is dying of lung cancer in El Paso. Farrell and Martinez go back a long ways, back to Prohibition when both worked with rum-runners. Martinez was "a Texan by birth, a mixture of Mexican, Indian and Negro that they called mestizo in Old Mexico." Even then Farrell respected Martinez: "He had the kind of brains that criminals rarely have, the kind that keep you out of alive, out of jail, and with enough money to last beyond the next week." Martinez is a guy whose ex-girlfriends shed tears when they remember how good they used to have it together. Farrell learned enough in his night work that he began smuggling liquor on his own. In the dozen times since then that he had seen Martinez, his friend "had had some kind of new racket, and had been doing well with it." What Farrell doesn't know is Martinez has stolen a perfect set of counterfeit plates and the bad guys are after his buddy. Martinez, on the other hand, knows the score. Going to the cops meant time behind bars. Returning the plates was an admission of defeat and submission to execution. "All that was left was to make war." The situation Farrell has stumbled into -- a band of counterfeiters out to kill the renegade Martinez -- can leave Farrell and his buddy as roadkill. Farrell's fight to save his friend is tooth and claw to the bittersweet end. Farrell has to find his friend before the evildoers do. Dixie Ray Chavez, the hired killer out to beat Farrell, tells his bosses, "Martinez has three friends in New Orleans. I'm bettin' he'll go to one of 'em for help, sooner or later." Who gets there first gets to shoot first. Chavez is one mean dude. He tortures one friend of Martinez "with a hot iron 'til her heart gave out." On another victim, "it looked as though skin had been flayed from her." Dixie Ray Chavez is a tuning fork for other bad guys to home in on. He "liked to think of himself as a bullet who stayed on course until the job was done." Chavez plans to be there before Farrell and gone before the Treasury agents stumble in. Farrell and Pale Shadow are fun for all Farrell's secrets, the most important being that he is Creole and passing for white in a racist society. His next best secret is his close relationship with his father, Frank Casey, a red-headed Irish cop ready to retire from the New Orleans Police department. Skinner has written four previous Wesley Farrell novels and four nonfiction books about the hard--boiled detective tradition. He is actually a well-respected academic at Xavier University in New Orleans. Pale Shadow takes place during September, 1940, in New Orleans, when the Negro Detective Squad covered the crimes the white guys won't and backed off the "white" cases. A time for riverboat gambling. A time when "a well-dressed man with a slick line of jive" can go a long way. The counterfeiters are pros: "The engraving technique is so good that the Bureau of Engraving and Printing is jealous. And the paper is good enough to fool ninety-seven percent of the people who touch it." No all cops in Pale Shadow are good guys, either, which surprises no one who knows New Orleans and its histories. "If there had existed in Detective Matty Paret even a scintilla of honesty, he might have been an outstanding detective. He was intelligent, thoughtful, and even possessed a certain shrewd insight into the foibles of his fellow man. Had he liked money a little less and hard work more, he'd have been a sergeant already." I envelope myself in this mythical past of crooked cops, honest robbers and the gray people who slide between them like a sharpened knife edge. I luxuriate in the world I am too young to have ever been a party to, a world I most likely would never have survived within, a world that helps me deal the real, everyday villains on the front page and the cable headlines. Wesley Farrell is a questionable hero in the same way that the 1930 and 1940 movies celebrated questionable heroes with actors like Humphrey Bogart, Dick Powell, and Bob Mitchum. Skinner writes, "Farrell moved silently through the crowd, his eyes glowing in that peculiar way from the shadow of his hat brim. Occasionally somebody felt the feral quality emanating from him and stepped to the side, hurriedly dragging a companion from Farrell's path." Locals whisper his name when he passes. Wes Farrell has that classic tenuous relationship with the cops, too. He has some friends, but even his friends suspect there's much wisdom percolating behind his mulatto features. Yes, Wesley Farrell is biracial. So few writers are multicultural, and yet this world grows more so every day. True cities like New Orleans have always been multicultural -- although that phrase is still rings new to the city and the world -- and yet Farrell is not part of that 1940s racist past. In the real 1940s Farrell's story would have been played out as another Example of the Tragic Mulatto, or worse the Tragic Half-breed. (Think of Paul Newman playing Elmore Leonard's Hombre; a man so marginalized, he isn't allowed a name until after he dies saving all the whites.) Farrell passes for white, and many call him "the great white hope, Wes Farrell, who reaches down to help all the poor, helpless niggers in distress." Farrell generally pulls off the masquerade, but not all the times. "Men never asked him why he did the things he did. It was always the women who tried to understand, who wanted an explanation for why he behaved in ways that were inexplicable in a white man." Skinner gives these denizens of New Orleans the wonderful names that 1940s crime novels thrive upon: Wisteroa Mullins, Little Head Lucas, cheap thugs named Tink and Rojo, Margaret "Jelly" Wilde, Marcel Aristide and Theron Oswald. I love this world where bodyguards and bouncers can be murdered silently in the night, this frontier of hard-boiled and noir. Where cons talk of "dumb twists," cons mumble about 'ofays," where only four aces always win. A world that of course includes classic femme fatales: "She was tall, maybe five-seven, with a lean, high-breasted figure and velvety skin the color of hark honey." She has a devastating effect on men, too. Even men hard as rock get goofy; "he had the insane urge to race around the room on all fours while he barked the lyrics to 'Jingle Bells.'" These are dangerous women. One of Skinner's gloriously described femmes owns and operates Sparrow's Joint, a most curious night club down along the riverfront warehouses. "Her sallow skin and bold, handsome features were those of a Jew or an Arab, Farrell had never known which." Sparrow tells Farrell, "I'll simply tell you to be careful. The other side of the world is on fire now, but evil energy is in the air even here." Skinner doesn't over-furnish the 1940s. We get just enough to locate us in that special time and place. A man might wear "a carefully trimmed mustache" and "a stylish Wilton fedora tipped over his right ear." Another has a collarless shirt and thick glasses made of window glass. A neon sign has the colorful shape of "a top-hatted crawdish leaning negligently against a martini glass." Drinkers toss down rye highballs in juke joints. Where men keep bottles of whiskey and Colt .38 Supers in their suitcases. Pale Shadow unfolds like a movie, and I love watching as "Farrell moved through the noise and destruction like a hot wind, his rage and blood lust blotting out all but the faceless shadow that retreated down toward the opposite end of the building. His gun jumped in his hand until the hammer fell on an empty chamber." I love the town that Skinner loves. New Orleans is a border town between the races. More complex than a love affair, and more shifting than standing on quicksand. "The center of New Orleans was beating like a healthy heart, and the death of a Negro woman in Gentilly meant little or nothing to the teeming life of Rampart Street." Meanwhile, at the bordello, one can hear the bells at Holy Ghost Catholic Church. We may want to visit Maxwell's Chicken Shack on Derbigny Street or the Sassafrass Lounge for an matinee drink. Pale Shadow is great fun. It's fun to watch how Skinner makes sure all the interested parties keep abreast of exposition. Pale S
Rating:  Summary: Pale Shadow is not a pale story Review: I'm surprised that more people haven't discovered Robert Skinner's Wesley Farrell series. Skinner's work is always well written, has interesting story lines, and has believable characters. However, unlike Skinner's previous novels in this series, our hero, Wesley Farrell isn't as prominately displayed this time around. Completely absent is his paramour, Savanna, a black club owner with a voice as rich as the delta. Rather, this time around Marcel Aristide, Wesley's cousin, makes a return appearence and steps to the forefront to follow in his sleuthing relative's footsteps. It certainly wasn't unusual for a light-skinned black man to pass himself off as a white man in the New Orleans of the 1930's and 1940's. Farrell is such a man and cunningly dangerous to boot, but he doesn't disregard his black heritage or disrepect his white father, an Irishman and Chief of Detectives, Frank Casey. Most father's would regret having a son who has been an unconvicted career criminal, but Frank Casey's life has been saved and his career enhansed because his son knows the wrong side of the law as well as his father knows the right side. Add to the complex story line the flavor of New Orleans, the taste of danger, a bit of intrigue, a wealth of racial mix and you have one of the most entertaining mysterys around. For other flavorful African American mysteries in New Orleans, try Barbara Hambly's Ben January series and James Sallis' Lew Griffin series.
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