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The dish is Davnet O'Reilly, who owes her job to best friend Jenny Blake- the daughter of Paul Blake, the patron of Blackwood's Club. Much of An Irish Solution's set-up takes place in this pretentious upscale imitation of an old-fashioned London gentlemen's club, where full-figured Davnet susses out what's going on while filling ice buckets and laying out china jugs of variegated flowers on the antique tables. Slender, dark-haired Jenny Blake's father is a stupid fop. Paul Blake's in deeper debt than he knows to a Dublin gangster known as The Robin. To sustain the impeccable reputation of the Club, Blake tangles old school chum Jerome Fennessy up in what seems a simple courier jaunt to the Continent. This Jerome is desperate. Dismissed from his teaching post after a scandal involving a young teenaged girl, Jerome is in debt. Too bad for him, he is naïve and also easily distracted.
Unfortunately for poor Romy Fennessy, (1) an iDEA trap springs and everything soon goes horribly, dreadfully awry, and (2) he's barking up the wrong kind of tree.
An Irish Solution goes unexpected places for a Dublin crime novel. It is intended to involve the readers in iDEA head Seamus Joyce, but he's bland. Much more interesting is Davnet's amateur sleuthing. By far she's the smartest character in the novel. She spots the crucial money connection. Her interactions are the most quirky and engaging, and Davnet's bravery in the face of the baddies' intimidation is truly inspiring. Go, redzer, go!
Though a long, effete opening must be re-read for clarity, I encourage Irish crime fic fans to endure. An Irish Solution ultimately hits convincing positions on the Clergy, money laundering, Dublin life, the drug war, and Irish courts. And Millar proves he can do action. His follow up, The Grounds, is on my to-read list. Don't do drugs! Use An Irish Solution: drink stout and whisky instead.Critical Mick says: Though the best bits are Davnet's, An Irish Solution portrays a richly-voiced, deadly Dublin. Millar is a good oul skin.
Yo! This review and all content on the DFA Guide site are copyright 2008 Mick Halpin. All links to other sites and documents are copyright to whatever source wrote something cool enough for Mick to give it a referral. Try to claim them as your own work and bad karma will catch up with you, baby. Believe it. Irate, huh? Managed to piss off another one? Direct your hatemail to mick @ mickhalpin dot com.
| This Page Was Last Updated On 21 July, 2008.
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