KIRKUS REVIEWS
2/15/04
FADE TO CLEAR
While tracking a remorseless kidnapper, a Korean-American shamus conducts
a parallel and equally dangerous investigation into himself.
Two years earlier, as a reporter for the San Jose Sentinel, Linda Maldonado
had helped Allen Choice (Underkill, 2003, etc.) solve a difficult case
and survive an emotional low point. The two had become lovers until
Linda abruptly
ended the affair. Now she's in Oakland because she wants to hire B&C,
Allen's firm, to recover her sister's child, nine year old Nora, kidnapped
in the wake
of an ugly divorce. Frank Staunton, the child's father, is a singularly
nasty piece of work whose hatred for his wife is implacable. He's taken
Nora and
performed a vanishing act expert enough to baffle the police and the FBI.
Fully sympathetic, Allen nevertheless views the assignment with misgivings.
To begin
with, he's not quite sure how he feels about Linda, though he's absolutely
certain how Serena Yew, his current girlfriend, will react to the prospect
of further involvement. Moreover he fears that Frank and his stone-killer
brother represent an entanglement he'd be better off without. But Allen
has an affinity
for risk that frequently earns him insights along with bruises: mana to
man incapable of leading the unexamined life.
Choice--intuitive, two-fisted, sometimes melancholic, often confused and
funny despite himself--drives a breakout novel not to be missed.
--Kirkus “starred” review