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Book cover of McKenzie's Friend
Family & Friendship - Fiction, Irish Fiction, Love & Relationships - Fiction, Arts & Entertainment - Fiction

McKenzie's Friend

by Philip Davison
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Overview

Harry Fielding has had enough of the low life. He's through with being an understrapper for M15. It's time to make a new start. He'll spend more time with his widowed father, Cecil. He'll look into that job he's heard about - a concierge/handyman for a small hotel. But Harry's fishing holiday with his father is interrupted by his old friend Alfie, the bent copper.

Alfie needs his help. He is in trouble. Actually, Alfie is trouble, but Harry is not one to abandon a friend, especially since Alfie's wife, Ruth - all long fingers and perfect belly - is also anxious to see him again. As it turns out, Alfie has been suspended from the police force but has lined up a private investigation job, a missing-person case that calls for Harry's expertise. But once on the case, Harry begins to wonder just what it is his friend wants him to do.

About the Author, Philip Davison

Philip Davison's first Harry Fielding novel, The Crooked Man, is now a film.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

The second installment of the Harry Fielding series packs all the quirky charm of the first volume into a more concise and carefully plotted story, as the former MI5 operative gets embroiled in a half-baked scheme to find a missing woman. The opening chapter finds Fielding biding his time in "a city other than London," waiting for a job as a concierge to open up. But Fielding's attempt to become legitimate fails when a crooked cop buddy named Alfie asks him to help find Vanessa Harquin, a woman in her 30s who has vanished. Alfie, recently suspended from the force, has been hired privately by Vanessa's father, a powerful publicist named Sydney Holland who suspects his son-in-law is responsible for Vanessa's disappearance. Fielding works behind the scenes to help locate the woman as Alfie dithers and complains about his failing marriage. The complaints hit home, since Fielding has, in fact, had an affair with Alfie's wife. Fielding remains a refreshingly odd character whose startling observations and turns of phrase are always entertaining, especially when they involve the detective's personal life ("We had a brief assignation: a one-night stand behind Alfie's back. We had both regretted the betrayal and had put it safely behind us. Is that what I thought?"). The plot bogs down in Alfie's problems and peccadilloes, but Davison gets back on track by introducing a compelling vengeance angle in the climax. The unforgettable Fielding character makes this series required reading for genre fans looking for a little spice in their detective fiction diet. (Feb. 25) Copyright 2003 Cahners Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Another noir thriller from Dubliner Davison follows p.i. Harry Fielding (Crooked Man, 2002) as he searches London’s underworld for a wealthy publicist’s missing daughter. To call Harry Fielding a private investigator would be something of a compliment: he’s basically a thug with a gun who takes money for doing things that could land him in jail. Formerly employed by MI5 as an "understrapper" (freelance operative) specializing in "nonexistent" missions (murder or blackmail, say), he grew weary of taking out the trash for government twits and swore never to accept another shady job. He even celebrated his return to respectability by taking his father on a fishing trip in the Lake District—only to be tracked down there by his old pal Alfie, a crooked cop recently suspended for taking bribes. Alfie spells trouble for anyone trying to turn over a new leaf, and, sure enough, he has a job for Harry. Vanessa Harquin, daughter of hotshot p.r. man Sydney Holland, has been missing for over a month, and Holland (fearing that the police have given up) has hired Alfie to find her. It looks like nice clean work for good money, but Harry is reluctant to join Alfie. First, Alfie has gone to pieces since his suspension, having taken to pulling guns on people in barroom brawls. Second, Holland seems to be hiding something from Harry and Alfie. And, third, the case will bring Harry uncomfortably close to Alfie’s wife Ruth, with whom he once had a brief affair. Still, Harry takes the case anyway—only to find every one of his fears realized. Is this any job for a man trying to go straight? Elegant but flat. Davison pushes his characters’ nihilism to such an extreme that, after a while, the enginesdriving his story (i.e., the pursuit of truth and justice) become too flooded with cynicism to turn over.

Book Details

Published
March 1, 2003
Publisher
Penguin Books
Pages
256
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780142001981

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