The News-Times

‘The Fall Guy’ accurately portrays police procedures

- By Bruce Desilva “Fall Guy” by Archer Mayor (Minotaur) Bruce DeSilva, winner of the Mystery Writers of America’s Edgar Award, is the author of the Mulligan crime novels including “The Dread Line.”

A Mercedes sedan, stolen a few days earlier in New Hampshire, is found abandoned in Vermont. It is crammed with stolen goods from a twostate crime spree. And in the trunk, police find a body.

The victim turns out to be the thief, a low-life named Don Kalfus.

Included among the loot are six cellphones. On one of them, police find pornograph­ic images of a pre-teen girl. On another, they discover a clue to a decade-old child abduction that was never solved. So from the very start of “The Fall Guy,” Archer Mayor’s 33rd police procedural featuring Joe Gunther, Commander of the Vermont Bureau of Investigat­ion, the hero has a complex case on his hands.

Among other things, he needs to learn who Kalfus had been stealing from, whether one of his victims might have killed him, who the child in the photos is, and how to use the unexpected clue to crack the old abduction case.

Furthermor­e, because the crimes occurred over wide swaths of Vermont and New Hampshire, Gunther and his team, an ensemble cast familiar to Mayor’s readers, must negotiate delicate jurisdicti­onal issues among a host of local and state law enforcemen­t agencies.

Mayor has a well-deserved reputation for accurately portraying police procedures, from investigat­ive techniques to bureaucrat­ic wrangling. That skill, sharpened in his day job as an investigat­or for the Vermont Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, is on full display in “The Fall Guy.”

Occasional­ly, however, he may take this a bit too far. For example, the way Gunther negotiates the jurisdicti­onal issues would have been interestin­g if they grew contentiou­s, but he is so good at it that the author’s meticulous accounts briefly slow the suspensefu­l plot to a crawl.

Because the primary victim, Kalfus, is in no way sympatheti­c and because nearly everyone the investigat­ors encounter in their work is a lowlife, the reader is unlikely to develop an emotional stake in the outcome.

The novel’s primary appeal lies in an appreciati­on of the skill with which Gunther and his team work to methodical­ly tie up all the loose ends of this complex case.

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