It’s 1893 in New York City. Max Greengrass is a brash young freelance reporter who gets paid by the word. He’s living in a rooming house operated by a Mrs. De Vogt, an outspoken feminist who loves to inflict her opinions on her young boarders. His income is intermittent and limited, and Max makes do by taking advantage of great deals like eating in bars where you can get “cold cuts, salted cod and pickled fish” along with a couple of cheap beers. Every time he comes close to getting hired on as a staff reporter, he seems to trip over his own feet and blow the deal.
Fortunately, Max is also good at tripping over stories in the most unexpected places. When an eccentric band of suburban women start murdering cats in large numbers and a young man is inexplicably murdered as well, Max just happens to be right at the scenes of the crimes. He’s off on a merry chase, trying to impress the editor of the New York Herald and finally nab the job of his dreams.
Unfortunately, the murder case hits too close to home. The murder victim, whose body disappears shortly after he’s shot, was involved with a fellow boarder with whom Max is seriously in lust. To make matters worse, the dead guy’s father offers to pay him generously to keep the story out of the papers. Max finds himself dealing with complex issues of ambition, money, lust and ethics. As if he didn’t have enough on his plate, he’s also fighting his attraction to a second resident of the rooming house and coping with his best friend’s developing relationship with his sister.
Michael Blaine’s The Midnight Band of Mercy is much more than a formulaic murder mystery. It’s a finely crafted period piece, a great time machine of a book that immerses the reader in the bustling life and complex problems of a city in transition. Among the characters, some real, some fictional, are the Jerry Falwells and Alan Dershowitz’s of their day. Blaine tackles issues like politics, race, class, homelessness and insurance fraud without being preachy and the main characters are flawed, likable and fascinating. One of the most appealing aspects of the book is that very little is as it appears on the surface, and that the surprises have little to do with obvious attempts to startle the reader and more to do with the true complexities of human life.
The stories that Max is chasing are compelling, and getting to the crux of them is satisfying. Equally gratifying is getting to the crux of Max. He’s well worth getting acquainted with, and Mike Blaine would serve his readers well by providing us with more Max Greengrass adventures.