Review: "Crown Vic" by Lee Goldberg
Crown Vic
by Lee Goldberg
Cutting Edge Books, 2023
Crown
Vic is
different from what novelist and screenwriter Lee Goldberg is known for writing
– easy going, well-plotted, and general audience mysteries like his brilliant Eve
Ronin series – but the two villain-as-hero tales included in this collection are
hardboiled and naughty fun. In the novelette length, “Ray Boyd Isn’t Stupid,”
we find the eponymous character rolling into a lakeshore resort, Granite Point
Park Resort, in Washington, fresh out of prison for stealing cars in his used police
cruiser Crown Vic Interceptor. He takes a liking to the place (after some
persuasion) and accepts a job: $10 an hour, along with room and board. The
local Sheriff’s Deputy takes an immediate dislike to Ray, but the women all love
Ray, including his boss’s wife, which is where all the trouble starts.
The
second, and the shorter of the two stories, “Occasional Risk” begins where the
first left off. Ray is back in his Crown Vic moseying around Arizona’s southern
desert and killing time at a seedy roadside motel in a nothing town. Ray Boyd
isn’t stupid, and so when a glossy big-moneyed woman seduces him in the motel’s
swimming pool he knows she wants something more than sex from him, but he’ll
take the sex just the same…
Crown
Vic’s stories are a marvelous mash-up of Dan J. Marlowe’s early Earl
Drake novels – The Name of the Game is Death, Endless Hour – and
the erotic thrillers so popular in video stores during the 1990s. But Ray, even
with all his failings, is a Lee Goldberg character: observant, witty, at times downright
funny – for the reader at least – and a heck of a good escape for all of us
drab work-a-day slobs.
Go here for the Kindle version and here for the paperback edition at Amazon.
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