Sunday, November 5, 2023

Broadcast Blues


Admittedly, I have eclectic reading tastes that often take me away from the blog’s main them of murder mysteries, espionage stories, adventure novels, and thrillers. Recently, I've read a couple historical novels such as The American Daughters and The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store. There’s the 1930’s Nobel Prize winning work of Sinclair Lewis with Babbitt, a recent Pulitzer Prize winning novel for fiction (Trust by Hernan Diaz), an autobiography from Prince Henry (Spare), nonfiction histories of 5,000 years of Chinese history (From Yao to Mao), another history about the zeppelin era (His Majesty’s Airship), and a Pulitzer Prize winning biography about Robert Oppenheimer, American Prometheus. 

Of course, I’ve never abandoned mystery novels. However, when I’ve been away from our primary theme for very long, it always feels so good to come back to a good murder mystery, especially when it involves an ongoing saga of a protagonist I’ve come to enjoy. It was like coming home after being away too long and sitting down in my favorite chair and reading for my own joy. That was exactly my situation when I learned that R. G. Belsky was about to publish a new novel, Broadcast Blues, the sixth in a series about Clare Carlson, a television reporter and news director in NYC. She is a most compelling character. Now approaching her 50th birthday, being a three-time divorce who is between relationships, dealing with a boss she hates, and facing the possible sale of her tv station, Carlson is desperate to have a new tawdry sensational story to chase down. The consistent thing about Clare is that there is always chaos happening around her in the Channel 10 newsroom. This story dives into NYC politics and crooked cops. Primarily, the story surrounds the murder of Wendy Kyle, who had been fired from her job in the NYPD, who had a very mixed police history of being praised for her good work and being severely reprimanded for overstepping her proper boundaries. She went on to become a notorious private investigator who specialized in catching wealthy husbands in the act of infidelity. She continued to be an irritant to the NYPD, so there were lots of people who would have been happy to see her dead. However, Clare seemed to be chasing a case for which there was no supporting evidence other than her intuition and need for a new story.

 

I could not put this one down. Belsky hits a nice balance between some good humor in the dialogue and real danger to his characters in the plot. I did not see the resolution of the main plot and subplots until the story got tied together at the end – didn’t see it coming. While Broadcast Blues could be a stand-alone novel, it’s my preference to read about Clare Carlson’s adventures in the order that the novels were published. This novel gets my strongest recommendation.

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