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Rating: Summary: Hardboiled Brooklyn Review: Moses 'Moe' Prager, the protag. of Reed Farrel Coleman's "Walking the Perfect Square" is a real stand up guy. He measures up with the best characters from the Noir canon. An ex-cop with one bad leg and too much time on his hands makes the kind of p.i. you can count on. He's seen a lot and can put two and two together. Hey you do the math! If you miss the "Rockford" or "Columbo" type mysteries, love NY or just want a story that goes down smooth give this one a spin!
Rating: Summary: Hardboiled Brooklyn Review: Moses 'Moe' Prager, the protag. of Reed Farrel Coleman's "Walking the Perfect Square" is a real stand up guy. He measures up with the best characters from the Noir canon. An ex-cop with one bad leg and too much time on his hands makes the kind of p.i. you can count on. He's seen a lot and can put two and two together. Hey you do the math! If you miss the "Rockford" or "Columbo" type mysteries, love NY or just want a story that goes down smooth give this one a spin!
Rating: Summary: The First Moe Prager: Walking The Perfect Square Review: On December 8, 1977 Patrick Maloney, Jr., college student, walked out of a local bar and vanished. As 19977 became 1978 other things in New York City like the arrest of the Son of Sam killer garner media attention. For recently retired Police Officer Moe Prager, the disappearance of Patrick Maloney, Jr. is insignificant and no different than many of the ills that befall the city's population. Not that Patrick isn't important in his own right, but Moe has more on his mind thanks to a ruined knee and is facing limited prospects and a lonely life.At relative loose ends when his friend and still a cop Rico Tripoli calls, he agrees to meet him for lunch at a local restaurant. Rico wants to talk to him about looking for Patrick. Once there, despite the obvious racism of the missing man's powerful father, Patrick Maloney, he agrees to start working the case in exchange for a favor regarding a much needed liquor license. Moe's brother wants him to go in with him on a wine shop and without any other options Moe has sort of agreed to do so. As he begins working the case, he realizes that he has missed the streets and soon discovers that everyone involved is lying to him. Nothing is the way he thought it was with his enemies or his friends. Twenty years later the case still haunts him and a call from a Nun in a local hospice brings it all back to life. A man is dying and wishes to unburden himself and will only do so to Me Prager. He may finally get the last piece of the painful puzzle that has haunted him for years and nearly destroyed his family. This is a very good novel featuring a number of interesting characters. The read is a little disconcerting at times as it moves back and forth between 1977 and 78, and the present (1998). I'm not a fan of flashbacks, extended or otherwise, but in this case it actually enhances the story. By moving back and forth, it creates a different perspective for the reader as the mystery is slowly solved. At the same time, the author has an incredible sense of detail and an uncanny ability to bring the work alive for the reader. He really got into my head and made me feel like I was there right with him, step for step, as he worked the case. There are not very many authors who can totally pull me into their world like that and he did it easily within the first ten pages or so. His characters were rich and complex with a decidedly noir slant and his sense of pacing and story development was right on. This was a very good read and according to my local library, the first novel of a new series built around the main character, Moe Prager. Unfortunately my local library does not have his earlier novels, "Little Easter," Life Goes Sleeping," and "They don't Play Stickball In Milwaukee." You can bet I'm going to be looking for them.
Rating: Summary: So well written, I truly did not want it to end. Review: Once again, I found myself thoroughly engrossed in an absolute knock out of a thriller involving a search that has profound effects on so many lives and asking "Who is this Reed Farrel Coleman?" The jacket tells me that he has written several other books, but I never heard of the author. If his other works were anywhere near as good as this one, Mr. Coleman should now have become as well known as Ed McBain. I am absolutely certain that after you read this superbly written and marvelously paced book you will agree that his publisher has been derelict in hiding Mr. Coleman's brilliant light. You will then spread the word to everyone that will listen. An absolute must read!!!
Rating: Summary: One Reason 1978 was a Good Year Review: Started reading this wonderful book at three in the afternoon and finished it ten and half hours later. I have not read a book from cover to cover in one read in years. This is helluva fine book by a very talented writer. Probably the best mystery/ suspense book I've read in five or six years. Moe is a great, well developed character, the kind of character you'd like to buy a beer. Hope Mr. Coleman's first Moe Prager book does well so he can make it a series.
Rating: Summary: One Reason 1978 was a Good Year Review: Walking the Perfect Square evokes the late 70's in New York City, and I mean the real city as only a real "five-borough" New Yorker can know it. What makes the main character, Moe Praeger, so compelling is his intensity of desire -- for a solution, for the truth, and for thin-lipped tough Catholic girls. Reed Farrel Coleman commits no technical fouls weaving his intricate plot to this reader's immense narrative satisfaction and delight. I look forward to more.
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