The Boy Detective Fails
by Joe Meno
2020-12-29 15:55:26
In this âcharmingâ and melancholic novel, a former child sleuth âinvestigates the hard-to-crack case of Lost Innocenceâ (Entertainment Weekly). A Chicago Tribune, Kirkus Reviews, and Booklist Book of the Year In the twilight of a ...
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In this âcharmingâ and melancholic novel, a former child sleuth âinvestigates the hard-to-crack case of Lost Innocenceâ (Entertainment Weekly). A Chicago Tribune, Kirkus Reviews, and Booklist Book of the Year In the twilight of a mysterious childhood full of wonder, Billy Argo, boy detective, is brokenhearted to find that his younger sister and crime-solving partner, Caroline, has committed suicide. Ten years later, Billy, age thirty, returns from an extended stay at St. Vitusâ Hospital for the Mentally Ill to discover the world full of unimaginable strangeness: office buildings vanish without reason, small animals turn up without their heads, and cruel villains ride city buses to complete their evil schemes. Lost within this unwelcoming place, Billy befriends two lonely, extraordinary childrenâone a science fair genius, the other a charming, silent bully. With a nearly forgotten bravery, he experiences the unendurable boredom of a telemarketing job; encounters a beautiful, desperate pickpocket; and confronts the nearly impossible solution to his sisterâs case. Along a path laden with hidden clues and codes, the boy detective may learn the greatest secret of all: the necessity of the unknown. âHaunted by the mystery of his sisterâs death and feeling that a lapse in his sleuthing may be to blame, Billy is determined to find out the reason for her suicide and to punish those responsible . . . The story of Billyâs search for truth, love and redemption is surprising and absorbing. Swaddled in melancholy and gentle humor, it builds in power as the clues pile up.â âPublishers Weekly âThe author gives Billy a gallery of rogues to combat and even sends him to investigate the Convocation of Evil at a local hotel (âFeatured Panel: To Wear a Mask?â). Meno sets himself a complicated task, marooning his straight-arrow, pulp-fiction protagonist in a world uglier than the Bobbsey Twins ever faced but refusing to go for satire. Instead, the author takes his compulsive investigator at face value.â âKirkus Reviews, starred review âComedic, imaginative, empathic . . . investigates the precincts of grief [and] our longing to combat chaos with reason.â âBooklist
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