Here is Ron Scheer reviewing Ed Gorman in 2014. R.I.P. buddies.
Ed Gorman, Riders on the Storm
Ed Gorman’s new Sam McCain mystery is set in 1971 and
reflects some of the civil turbulence of those Vietnam years as they wash over
a small Iowa town.
Plot. A hawkish Senator is trying to ride a waning tide of
patriotic enthusiasm to keep himself in office. But his handpicked candidate
for a Congressional seat gets murdered after an altercation with a fellow
veteran who has made public his opposition to the war.
That John
Kerry-sympathizing vet is quickly suspected of the crime by the new sheriff,
and the man’s best friend, McCain, has an uphill battle finding evidence of his
innocence.
Time and tide. Gorman remembers the early
70s well (Janis Joplin is heard on the radio at one point singing “Me and Bobby
McGee”). The novel is aptly named for the mournful Doors song,
“Riders On the Storm,” which recalls the darkly violent and divided mood of a
time marked by the growing national ambivalence about Vietnam. He is also a
sharp observer of small-town politics and social distinctions.
The portrayal of women in the novel does much to fix its
particular point in social history. Whether wives, lovers, or others, they are
mostly untouched by the feminist creeds that came to dominate public discourse
about gender roles in the years that followed. Gorman shows them as attractive
and sexy, reliant on the men in their lives, homemakers and loving mothers of
small children.
Ed Gorman |
Two, however, emerge as professional women, one of them
McCain’s own girl Friday, bracingly independent and unapologetically
resourceful. Another seems able to blend marriage and career, though we don’t
learn quite everything a candid review would reveal about her until well after
she gets involved in McCain’s attempts to rescue his falsely accused friend.
While Gorman does not necessarily endorse it, there is much
of the 1970s indulgence in extramarital sex, booze, and other pastimes that had
a generation smugly confident in themselves because they were under 30. But you
can feel the earth shifting under McCain’s feet as the 1960s recede into the
hazy distance behind him.
Wrapping up. This is an enjoyable novel that has as much fun
capturing the time and place of its setting as puzzling over the clues pointing
to the solution of the mystery it poses. Whether westerns or crime fiction, you
know you’re in good hands with Ed Gorman. I recommend this one.
Riders on the Storm is currently
available in print and ebook formats at amazon and Barnes&Noble.
8 comments:
Rest in glory.
A great author. A great series. A great blogger.
And Ron also an impressive writer and both Ed and Ron impressive bloggers.
Excellent choice, Patti. And a fine author and blogger.
I miss Ron and Ed. Great writers, great guys.
I don't remember ever seeing a copy of this one, and I don't know why. The Doors were one of my favorite groups at the time, and the song especially so.
For my sins, I have never heard of Ed Gorman.
Though this appeals He is also a sharp observer of small-town politics and social distinctions.
So I will add it to my list. Thanks for the review
As we know that, Gorman has vivid memories of the early 1970s (he recalls Janis Joplin singing "Me and Bobby McGee" on the radio). The novel is called after the melancholy Doors song "Riders On the Storm," which evokes the darkly violent and divided tone of a time marked by growing public ambivalence toward Vietnam. He's also an astute observer of small-town politics and socioeconomic differences.
For more information go to Bellen HP
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