NEED MORE ROAD
By Stephen Jared
Soltice Publishing
202 pages
Stephen Jared is one of the more
promising voices in New Pulp fiction working today and his past titles have
shown a real flare for both heroic adventure and tightly plotted noir crime
thrilles. Whereas with “Need More
Road,” he sets out on a much more ambitions journey
to create a poignant character study of a lonely man living in quiet
desperation. Sadly, even his talent can’t save the book’s rambling second half.
The tale is set in the post World
War II years. Eddie Howard is a fifty year old bank clerk living the sleep
desert town of Barstow, California. He lives alone in his dead
parents’ house where he was raised and the only real joy he has are his trips
to the small movie house. Eddie loves the movies and sees each new release
multiple times. They are his ticket out of the mundane routine of his boorish life.
Then one day a beautiful young woman
walks into the bank and from that moment on Eddie’s world is sent spiraling out
of control. A Marilyn Monroe clone, Mary Rose has come to Barstow
to set up an account for her father, Mr.McCoy, who is still living back in Los Angeles. Eddie
befriends her and they soon become close. He can’t believe his good
fortune. When her supposed father
eventually arrives in town, the reader is miles ahead of this familiar noir
plot line. The man calling himself Mary
Rose’s father is actually her criminal boyfriend and they are in town to rob
the bank. By now Eddie has fallen totally under the blonde femme fatale’s
charms.
All this is classic noir and Jared
does a great job moving the story along carefully with no sense of urgency. It
is this deliberate pacing that builds the tension and as poor Eddie falls
deeper and deeper into the couple’s web of lies, it is impossible to put the
book down. The heist is carried out and then the characters begin their escape
with the stolen cash.
Even when Eddie manages to outwit McCoy
and his safecracking buddy, and escape their clutches with Mary Rose in tow,
the suspense rolls along at breakneck speed taking the fugitives on a twisting,
rambling road. All the while their relationship seems to flounder and have no clear
purpose; it’s as if despite everything that has happened, Eddie and Mary Rose
are doomed to remain strangers.
The hallmark of noir fiction is a
climatic finale that is most often tragic. Whereas Jared’s last third of “Need More Road” doesn’t
go anywhere. It just stops. The book has no solid ending to justify its powerful
first half. At the end we are left with an exercise in good writing. In this genre that is just not enough.
1 comment:
It's always a shame when a promising new thriller doesn't know how to resolve its own plot. Ah, well. A strong first half is better than many can manage. Cheers for the review, it was a good read.
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