Trouble Is His Business-A Spenser Novel By Robert B.
Parker-A Review
Book Review
By Sam Lowell
Sixkill, Robert B. Parker, G.P. Putnam’s Sons, New York,
2011
Funny what will turn up on your summer reading list and why.
Sure I am like any other heated, roasted urban dweller looking for a little
light reading to while away the summer doldrums. Most days I like to review
high-toned literary masterpieces or squirrelly little historical books fit for
the academy. But those kinds of books cannot survive the summer siege. Which
brings us to the book under review, Robert B. Parker’s last Spenser series book
written by him Sixkill. (Others, I
think, have written for the series under their own names if I am not mistaken.)
Or will bring us to the book under review after I go through a little of how I
came to read this one. How I came to read a crime novel for crying out loud.
That is not as condescending as it sounds since long ago I learned the very
hard lesson that serious crime writers like Dashiell Hammett, the above-mentioned
Raymond Chandler, Nelson Algren, Ross MacDonald and a few others, had earned
their places in the American literary canon. Their hard-bitten sparse dialogues
and plotlines were worthy of emulation, or if not that then a thoroughgoing
serious read.
That is how in a roundabout way we get to this book. See
every year when the doldrums come I automatically reach for a little Chandler
or Hammett from my library to see the real deal, to see the masters strut their
stuff in order to spruce up (and parse, if possible) my own writing. This year
when I did so I noticed a book Poodle
Spring by Raymond Chandler and Robert B. Parker. This final Philip Marlowe
series book was never finished by Chandler before he died in 1959. Parker
finished it up in 1989. I have reviewed that book mostly in positive fashion in
this space.
Robert B. Parker, of course had been a name known to me as
the crime novel writer of the Spenser series of which I had read several of the
earlier ones before moving on to others interests. While checking up on what
Parker, who died in 2010, had subsequently written I noticed another
Chandler-Parker collaboration Perchance
To Dream: Robert B. Parker’s Sequel To Raymond Chandler’s The Big Sleep. I
have reviewed that effort, again mostly in positive fashion, although with some
longing for old Chandler’s touch and flair for language. Since I was on a roll,
was being guided by the ghost of Raymond Chandler maybe, I decided to check out
what turned out to be Parker’s last Spenser effort. Now we are all caught up on
genesis.
Spenser (like the English poet as he liked to note early in
the series), an intrepid PI working out of familiar to me Boston, had many of
Marlowe’s qualities, had faced danger alone with a sure hand. Naturally he had
to be updated a bit for modern sensibilities around the women question, the
race question and how to operate in proper Boston a very different milieu from
the slumming streets of LA that Marlowe worked in his prime. The Spenser series’
strong points reflected that toughness, that errant knight tilting after
windmills that had made Marlowe (especially onscreen) such a compelling
character. And Parker’s story lines early on as well. This last one of the
series while it had its moments told me a lot about why I had abandoned the
series after the first several novels in the days when he and his pal Hawk did seeking
rough justice thing. This one seemed rather formula-driven in the dialogue. The
usual love bug stuff with his sweetie Susan, their eating habits at better
Boston restaurants and an off-hand search for justice around the edges. The
story of Sixkill, the Cree who became his “associate” was the only thing that
saved this one from being below ho-hum.
Check out this story line and see what I mean. A young woman
is dead in the room of a famous if slovenly and overweight not one of nature’s
noblemen movie star, Jumbo Nelson, in Boston to shoot a film and make a ton of
money. Now this Jumbo is nothing but a sexist pig to put it bluntly among his
many off-putting qualities but Spenser is asked by a cop friend who has his own
doubts about what happened to see if Jumbo did the deed, committed rape and murder to cover his tracks. Or if it was an
accident, or something. So Spenser went to work, checked everything and
everyone out like he always did as a professional. Jumbo though was stonewalling
him (to be kind, it was actually worse than that), tried to beat him down with
his hefty Cree bodyguard Sixkill of the title. The kid was some kind of
ex-college football star who could have made the pros except he liked sex,
drugs, and booze too much. So bodyguard. But not bodyguard enough to take old
pro Spenser down.
So, fired in a rage by Jumbo, Sixkill latched onto Spenser,
and Spenser latched onto Sixkill, maybe not like Hawk in the old days but with
something driving to help the kid out, get him thinking straight. Meanwhile the
mystery around the young woman’s death after checking with family, friends and
others began to look like a weird sex tryst gone wrong. And in the end whether
Spenser liked it or not that is the way he played it to his cop friend. Old
Jumbo might just walk if push came to shove. Of course along the way some very
influential film-backers, some very “connected” in the old-fashioned sense of
the word, mobsters, gangsters, okay , had been very, very nervous about what
Spenser might find out, might find that Jumbo did the deed, actually murdered the
girl, and they would be out serious
dough. Despite being warned off repeatedly Spenser naturally kept pushing the
envelope, kept making the connected guys nervous. They finally sent some local
hit men after Spenser. What a joke. They sent their top guy, a guy who liked to
kill for kicks. What a joke. Zeroes. Ho hum. But you can see what I mean by the
series having run out of steam by this time in Parker’s career. Thankfully
Sixkill was hanging around enough to create a nice mini-story.
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