THE BIG CLEAR
By Christopher Harris
Short Cypher Press
275 pages
Mason “Dub” Storm was a Special Forces sniper in the first
Gulf War and then worked in East African locales such a Somalia with an elite secret
platoon. In the end Storm began to
question his own justifications for his assignments and just who his puppet
masters really were. Ultimately he left
the service and returned to his home base of Austin, Texas
to pick up the pieces of whatever remained of his soul.
As the book opens, Dub, is a two bit stoner working,
whenever he can get a customer, as a private investigator. Because of his drug connections, he comes in
contact with Angela Easley, the strung out youngest daughter of one of the
richest men in Texas. Her three year old son, Hunter Parsons, has
been kidnapped and she begs Dub to find him for her. Well aware he is venturing into a world as
alien to him as the foreign battlefields of his past, the weary private eye
agrees to help out until the police take over.
It all seems easy enough.
Right. Until Dub recalls Angela’s older sister, and her
Daddy’s chief business assistant, is none other than the high school sexpot
from his youth, Heather Easley. One look
at her in her expensive mannish business suit over her hour glass, trim body
and Dub finds himself floating in ancient dreams that were never ever going to
come true. Then, a friend named Kid, who
had been helping him with surveillance, is brutally murdered and Dub’s hands
are once again covered in other people’s blood.
Gunfights, steamy sex and a mystery with enough twists to give us a queasy
stomach abound in these pages.
Harris’s style is a mix of traditional noir and punk giving
the narrative a smooth jolt throughout and becomes quickly addictive. He deftly mixes Dub’s confused present with
his hellish past and when the two collide viciously towards the finale, it is a
satisfying resolution though still an ambiguous one. Dub Storm is one of the most complicated
heroes I’ve encountered in a long, long time and one I’m hoping to see in
action again soon. This is a
well-executed thriller by a writer worth keeping an eye out. Go pick up “The Big Clear” and prove my
point.
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