Walsh’s mystery novel, set in a struggling New England city, follows a police detective as he tries to untangle a crime involving murder, arson, and institutional corruption.
Ocean Park, Massachusetts, is in upheaval due to financial crises that have resulted in struggling industries and police and firefighter unions preparing to strike. Det. Matt Conley is pulled into the thick of it when he begins to investigate a fatal attack on Joseph Denard, a Haitian American transit safety officer. Denard’s co-worker, Emmanuel Hillaire, assists Conley with the investigation, and the two encounter brutal union leaders, crooked police officers, and low-level gangsters, as well as members of a Voudou church who are implicated in the death of Denard. Meanwhile, Conley is struggling in his personal life, trying to protect his wife, Gina, from the realities of his job as the newly appointed chief of detectives; their relationship is put to the test as he becomes further embroiled in the case and the city’s underworld. Walsh successfully creates a vibrant setting and memorable main players. His depiction of Ocean Park is strong and clear, quickly revealing a failing factory town that’s trying desperately to reclaim its former glory. However, some secondary characters feel stereotypical, and the dialogue tends to drift into cliché at times: “We’re alike, you and I,” says a threatening character at one point. Conflicts are resolved very easily, often accompanied by long monologues to explain necessary plot details. In addition, the ending feels quite rushed, with all the subplots too neatly tied together as the author sets up a sequel.
An uneven crime novel set in a well-drawn urban landscape.